This character is a Nonspacing Mark and is mainly used in the Tirhuta script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it acts as Nonspacing Mark. When changing direction it is not mirrored. U+114BF prohibits a line break before it. The glyph can be confused with one other glyph.
The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint:
The Tirhuta or Maithili script was the primary historical script for the Maithili language, as well as one of the historical scripts for Sanskrit. It is believed to have originated in the 13th century CE. It is very similar to BengaliβAssamese script, with most consonants being effectively identical in appearance. For the most part, writing in Maithili has switched to the Devanagari script, which is used to write neighbouring Central Indic languages to the west and north such as Hindi and Nepali, and the number of people with a working knowledge of Tirhuta has dropped considerably in recent years.
Representations
System
Representation (click value to copy)
NΒΊ
70847
UTF-8
F0 91 92 BF
UTF-16
D8 05 DC BF
UTF-32
00 01 14 BF
URL-Quoted
%F0%91%92%BF
HTML hex reference
𑒿
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake
Γ’βΕΓ°ββΒΏ
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes)
90 34 9C 31
RFC 5137
\u'114BF'
Bash and Zsh inside echo -e
\U000114BF
C and C++
\U000114BF
C#
\U000114BF
CSS
\0114BF
Excel
=UNICHAR(70847)
Go
\U000114BF
JavaScript
\uD805\uDCBF
Modern JavaScript since ES6
\u{114bf}
JSON
\uD805\uDCBF
Java
\uD805\uDCBF
Lua
\u{114BF}
Matlab
char(70847)
Perl
"\x{114BF}"
PHP
\u{114bf}
PostgreSQL
U&'\+0114BF'
PowerShell
`u{114BF}
Python
\U000114BF
Ruby
\u{114bf}
Rust
\u{114bf}
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