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   September 2024
  - Unicode 15.0 update.




CANADIAN SYLLABICS CHI SIGN character


Name:
CANADIAN SYLLABICS CHI SIGN
Hex Number:
U+166D
Decimal Number:
5741
HTML Entity (Dec):
᙭
HTML Entity (Hex):
᙭
Category:
Po (Other Puntuation)
Bidi Class:
L (Left-to-Right)
Mirrored:
N
Combining Class:
0
Unicode Block:
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics
Plane:
0
Plane Code:
BMP
Plane Description:
Basic Multilingual Plane
Plane Range:
0000-FFFF
Character Preview:













CANADIAN SYLLABICS CHI SIGN is a punctuation mark of other type from the Basic Multilingual Plane.

The bidi class of CANADIAN SYLLABICS CHI SIGN is Left-to-Right (Strong). It belongs to the strong left-to-right characters..

The Left-to-Right (L) bidi class is assigned to characters that are written from left to right. This includes most alphabetic characters from Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and other scripts that are typically written in this direction. The presence of L characters in a text influences the overall text directionality in bidirectional contexts.

Other Punctuation (Po) refers to all other punctuation marks that do not fit into the connector, dash, open, close, initial, or final categories. This includes characters like the period, comma, colon, and various other symbols used to structure sentences and phrases.

This character belongs to the Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics block. Canadian Aboriginal syllabic writing, or simply syllabics, is a family of abugidas (consonant-based alphabets) used to write a number of Aboriginal Canadian languages of the Algonquian, Inuit, and (formerly) Athabaskan language families. These syllabics are stored in two different unicode blocks..





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