Number Forms

Unicode block (U+2150-218F)

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

change
Number Forms[1]
Character Image Meaning Code
1⁄7 The fraction one seventh. U+2150
1⁄9 The fraction one ninth. U+2151
1⁄10 The fraction one tenth. U+2152
1⁄3 The fraction one third. U+2153
2⁄3 The fraction two thirds. U+2154
1⁄5 The fraction one fifth. U+2155
2⁄5 The fraction two fifths. U+2156
3⁄5 The fraction three fifths. U+2157
4⁄5 The fraction four fifths. U+2158
1⁄6 The fraction one sixth. U+2159
5⁄6 The fraction five sixths. U+215A
1⁄8 The fraction one eighth. U+215B
3⁄8 The fraction three eighths. U+215C
5⁄8 The fraction five eighths. U+215D
7⁄8 The fraction seven eighths. U+215E
1/ A fraction with one as the numerator. U+215F
I The roman numeral for one. U+2160
II The roman numeral for two. U+2161
III The roman numeral for three. U+2162
IV The roman numeral for four. U+2163
V The roman numeral for five. U+2164
VI The roman numeral for six. U+2165
VII The roman numeral for seven. U+2166
VIII The roman numeral for eight. U+2167
IX The roman numeral for nine. U+2168
X The roman numeral for ten. U+2169
XI The roman numeral for eleven. U+216A
XII The roman numeral for twelve. U+216B
L The roman numeral for 50. U+216C
C The roman numeral for 100. U+216D
D The roman numeral for 500. U+216E
M The roman numeral for 1,000. U+216F
i The roman numeral for one. (lowercase) U+2170
ii The roman numeral for two. (lowercase) U+2171
iii The roman numeral for three. (lowercase) U+2172
iv The roman numeral for four. (lowercase) U+2173
v The roman numeral for five. (lowercase) U+2174
vi The roman numeral for six. (lowercase) U+2175
vii The roman numeral for seven. (lowercase) U+2176
viii The roman numeral for eight. (lowercase) U+2177
ix The roman numeral for nine. (lowercase) U+2178
x The roman numeral for ten. (lowercase) U+2179
xi The roman numeral for eleven. (lowercase) U+217A
xii The roman numeral for twelve. (lowercase) U+217B
l The roman numeral for 50. (lowercase) U+217C
c The roman numeral for 100. (lowercase) U+217D
d The roman numeral for 500. (lowercase) U+217E
m The roman numeral for 1,000. (lowercase) U+217F
CD Another way to show the roman numeral for 1,000. U+2180
  The roman numeral for 5,000. U+2181
  The roman numeral for 10,000. U+2182
Ɔ The roman numeral for 100. (horizontally flipped) U+2183
ɔ Flipped lowercase letter C. U+2184
ʕ Another way to show the roman numeral for 6. U+2185
Another way to show the roman numeral for 50. U+2186
  The roman numeral for 50,000. U+2187
  The roman numeral for 100,000. U+2188
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

change
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Unicode Blocks data file, Unicode version 13.0" (PDF). Unicode Consortium. Retrieved January 27, 2021.
  2. 2.0 2.1 De Vlieger, Michael (2010). "Symbology Overview" (PDF). The Duodecimal Bulletin. 4X [58] (2).