This character is a Other Letter and is mainly used in the Egyptian Hieroglyphs script.
The glyph is not a composition. It has no designated width in East Asian texts. In bidirectional text it is written from left to right. When changing direction it is not mirrored. The word that U+139C0 forms with similar adjacent characters prevents a line break inside it.
The Unikemet database provides additional information about this hieroglyph. It is described there as βTwo arms, connected at the shoulder, one arm forward, holding a round shield, seen in profile, other arm downwards, forearm at 90u00b0 of the upper arm, holding a mace (T3) vertically.β.
Representations
System
Representation (click value to copy)
NΒΊ
80320
UTF-8
F0 93 A7 80
UTF-16
D8 0E DD C0
UTF-32
00 01 39 C0
URL-Quoted
%F0%93%A7%80
HTML hex reference
𓧀
Wrong windows-1252 Mojibake
Γ°βΒ§β¬
Encoding: GB18030 (hex bytes)
91 31 DD 34
RFC 5137
\u'139C0'
Bash and Zsh inside echo -e
\U000139C0
C and C++
\U000139C0
C#
\U000139C0
CSS
\0139C0
Excel
=UNICHAR(80320)
Go
\U000139C0
JavaScript
\uD80E\uDDC0
Modern JavaScript since ES6
\u{139c0}
JSON
\uD80E\uDDC0
Java
\uD80E\uDDC0
Lua
\u{139C0}
Matlab
char(80320)
Perl
"\x{139C0}"
PHP
\u{139c0}
PostgreSQL
U&'\+0139C0'
PowerShell
`u{139C0}
Python
\U000139C0
Ruby
\u{139c0}
Rust
\u{139c0}
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Two arms, connected at the shoulder, one arm forward, holding a round shield, seen in profile, other arm downwards, forearm at 90u00b0 of the upper arm, holding a mace (T3) vertically.