U+11F4A "𑽊" Kawi Punctuation Double Dot Unicode Character
Unicode Version 17.0
U+11F4A "𑽊" Kawi Punctuation Double Dot is a symbol used within the historical Kawi script, an ancient writing system employed across much of maritime Southeast Asia, including parts of modern Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines, from roughly the 8th to the 16th centuries. This double dot mark functions as a punctuation glyph, primarily serving to indicate a pause or break in a text, similar in many ways to how a colon or a comma might be used in modern Latin scripts. Carved onto stone inscriptions and palm-leaf manuscripts, it helped scribes structure written records, such as legal decrees, religious verses, or literary works, by clearly separating clauses or distinct sections. As part of the Kawi block encoded in Unicode 15.0, this character aids in the accurate digital representation and study of ancient documents, preserving a crucial element of Southeast Asian epigraphy and textual tradition.
General Properties
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding |
𑽊 |
| HTML Hex Encoding |
𑽊 |
| UTF-8 Encoding |
0xF0 0x91 0xBD 0x8A |
| UTF-16 Encoding |
0xD807 0xDF4A |
| UTF-32 Encoding |
0x00011F4A |
| C/C++/Java Escape |
\ud807\udf4a |
Unicode Properties