Number Forms
Number Forms is a Unicode block. It has symbols of fractions and roman numerals. The block Latin-1 Supplement also has fraction symbols that are not in this block.[1]
Symbols
| Character | Image | Meaning | Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| ⅐ | 1⁄7 | The fraction one seventh. | U+2150 |
| ⅑ | 1⁄9 | The fraction one ninth. | U+2151 |
| ⅒ | 1⁄10 | The fraction one tenth. | U+2152 |
| ⅓ | 1⁄3 | The fraction one third. | U+2153 |
| ⅔ | 2⁄3 | The fraction two thirds. | U+2154 |
| ⅕ | 1⁄5 | The fraction one fifth. | U+2155 |
| ⅖ | 2⁄5 | The fraction two fifths. | U+2156 |
| ⅗ | 3⁄5 | The fraction three fifths. | U+2157 |
| ⅘ | 4⁄5 | The fraction four fifths. | U+2158 |
| ⅙ | 1⁄6 | The fraction one sixth. | U+2159 |
| ⅚ | 5⁄6 | The fraction five sixths. | U+215A |
| ⅛ | 1⁄8 | The fraction one eighth. | U+215B |
| ⅜ | 3⁄8 | The fraction three eighths. | U+215C |
| ⅝ | 5⁄8 | The fraction five eighths. | U+215D |
| ⅞ | 7⁄8 | The fraction seven eighths. | U+215E |
| ⅟ | 1/ | A fraction with one as the numerator. | U+215F |
| Ⅰ | I | The roman numeral for one. | U+2160 |
| Ⅱ | II | The roman numeral for two. | U+2161 |
| Ⅲ | III | The roman numeral for three. | U+2162 |
| Ⅳ | IV | The roman numeral for four. | U+2163 |
| Ⅴ | V | The roman numeral for five. | U+2164 |
| Ⅵ | VI | The roman numeral for six. | U+2165 |
| Ⅶ | VII | The roman numeral for seven. | U+2166 |
| Ⅷ | VIII | The roman numeral for eight. | U+2167 |
| Ⅸ | IX | The roman numeral for nine. | U+2168 |
| Ⅹ | X | The roman numeral for ten. | U+2169 |
| Ⅺ | XI | The roman numeral for eleven. | U+216A |
| Ⅻ | XII | The roman numeral for twelve. | U+216B |
| Ⅼ | L | The roman numeral for 50. | U+216C |
| Ⅽ | C | The roman numeral for 100. | U+216D |
| Ⅾ | D | The roman numeral for 500. | U+216E |
| Ⅿ | M | The roman numeral for 1,000. | U+216F |
| ⅰ | i | The roman numeral for one. (lowercase) | U+2170 |
| ⅱ | ii | The roman numeral for two. (lowercase) | U+2171 |
| ⅲ | iii | The roman numeral for three. (lowercase) | U+2172 |
| ⅳ | iv | The roman numeral for four. (lowercase) | U+2173 |
| ⅴ | v | The roman numeral for five. (lowercase) | U+2174 |
| ⅵ | vi | The roman numeral for six. (lowercase) | U+2175 |
| ⅶ | vii | The roman numeral for seven. (lowercase) | U+2176 |
| ⅷ | viii | The roman numeral for eight. (lowercase) | U+2177 |
| ⅸ | ix | The roman numeral for nine. (lowercase) | U+2178 |
| ⅹ | x | The roman numeral for ten. (lowercase) | U+2179 |
| ⅺ | xi | The roman numeral for eleven. (lowercase) | U+217A |
| ⅻ | xii | The roman numeral for twelve. (lowercase) | U+217B |
| ⅼ | l | The roman numeral for 50. (lowercase) | U+217C |
| ⅽ | c | The roman numeral for 100. (lowercase) | U+217D |
| ⅾ | d | The roman numeral for 500. (lowercase) | U+217E |
| ⅿ | m | The roman numeral for 1,000. (lowercase) | U+217F |
| ↀ | CD | Another way to show the roman numeral for 1,000. | U+2180 |
| ↁ | The roman numeral for 5,000. | U+2181 | |
| ↂ | The roman numeral for 10,000. | U+2182 | |
| Ↄ | Ɔ | The roman numeral for 100. (horizontally flipped) | U+2183 |
| ↄ | ɔ | Flipped lowercase letter C. | U+2184 |
| ↅ | ʕ | Another way to show the roman numeral for 6. | U+2185 |
| ↆ | ↆ | Another way to show the roman numeral for 50. | U+2186 |
| ↇ | The roman numeral for 50,000. | U+2187 | |
| ↈ | The roman numeral for 100,000. | U+2188 | |
| ↉ | 0⁄3 | The fraction zero thirds. This is used in baseball scorekeeping.[1] | U+2189 |
| ↊ | Upside down two. This is one way to show the number 10 in duodecimal.[2][1] | U+218A | |
| ↋ | Upside down three. This is one way to show the number 11 in duodecimal.[2][1] | U+218B |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Unicode Blocks data file, Unicode version 18.0" (PDF). Unicode Consortium. Retrieved January 27, 2021.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 De Vlieger, Michael (2010). "Symbology Overview" (PDF). The Duodecimal Bulletin. 4X [58] (2).