U+A6EC "ꛬ" Bamum Letter Samba Unicode Character
Unicode Version 17.0
ꛬ
U+A6EC "ꛬ" Bamum Letter Samba is a glyph from the Bamum script, a writing system created in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by King Ibrahim Njoya of the Bamum Kingdom in present-day Cameroon. This specific letter represents a phoneme in the Bamum language and is part of the script's transformation from an earlier pictographic system to a more syllabic alphabet later refined by the king and his advisors. The character belongs to the Bamum Supplement block in Unicode, which encodes additional symbols needed for the modern orthography of the language, and it is used in written texts to preserve the cultural and linguistic heritage of the Bamum people.
General Properties
| Code Point | U+A6EC |
| Version Added | 5.2 |
| Name | Bamum Letter Samba |
| Block | Bamum |
| General Category | Letter Number |
| Canonical Combining Class | Not Reordered |
| Bidirectional Class | Left To Right |
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding | ꛬ |
| HTML Hex Encoding | ꛬ |
| UTF-8 Encoding | 0xEA 0x9B 0xAC |
| UTF-16 Encoding | 0xA6EC |
| UTF-32 Encoding | 0x0000A6EC |
| C/C++/Java Escape | \ua6ec |