U+146D "ᑭ" Canadian Syllabics Ki Unicode Character
Unicode Version 17.0
U+146D "ᑭ" Canadian Syllabics Ki is a glyph used in the Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics writing system, which was originally developed to write the Cree and Ojibwe languages and later adapted for other Indigenous languages across Canada. This specific character represents the sound "ki," formed by orienting the basic syllable shape for the consonant "k" with a central dot or rotated positioning to indicate the vowel "i." Part of the Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics block, it encodes a script that enabled widespread literacy among many First Nations communities in the 19th and 20th centuries, and it remains in use today in various orthographies for languages like Inuktitut, where similar syllabic characters retain cultural and linguistic significance.
General Properties
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding |
ᑭ |
| HTML Hex Encoding |
ᑭ |
| UTF-8 Encoding |
0xE1 0x91 0xAD |
| UTF-16 Encoding |
0x146D |
| UTF-32 Encoding |
0x0000146D |
| C/C++/Java Escape |
\u146d |
Unicode Properties