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U+2643, ♃
JUPITER

[U+2642]
Miscellaneous Symbols
[U+2644]

Translingual

Alternative forms

Etymology

The Greek letter Zeta with an abbreviation stroke, for Ζεύς (Zeús), the Greek equivalent to the Roman god Jupiter.[1] The form changed from Classical and early Medieval ⟨Ƶ⟩ to one with a more salient cross, ⟨♃⟩, in the 15th–16th century, at about the time that Christian crosses were added to , and , and so may have had a similar motivation.

Use of ♃ for Thursday, near the bottom of the calendar dial of this 16th-century clock-calendar.

Symbol

  1. (astronomy, astrology) Jupiter.
  2. (alchemy, archaic) tin.
  3. (alchemy, archaic, rare) electrum.
  4. (Can we verify(+) this sense?) (botany, obsolete) herbaceous perennial plant.
    (the orbital period of Jupiter is 12 years)[2]
  5. (rare) Thursday.
    Refers to the Latin phrase dies Iovis, which literally means "Jupiter's day".

Derived terms

  • (astronomy): M – Jovian mass (as a unit of measurement; more commonly MJ).
R – Jovian radius (more commonly RJ).
  • (alchemy): 🜩 – tin ore.
Planetary symbols
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References

  1. ^ Jones, Alexander (1999) Astronomical Papyri from Oxyrhynchus, →ISBN, pages 62–63
  2. ^ J. Lindley (1848) An introduction to botany[1], 4 edition, volume 2, London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, pages 385–386

Latin

Proper noun

 m sg (genitive ♃vis); third declension

  1. (alchemy) Alternative spelling of Iuppiter (Jupiter)
    • 1701, Johann Christoph Sommerhoff, Lexicon pharmaceutico-chymicum latino-germanicum & germanico-latinum [Pharmaceutico-Chemical Lexicon, Latin-German and German-Latin], page 399:
      Arte ſivè Chymice parata: ut Vitriolum ♃vis, ☽næ, ♂tis, ☉lis, ♀ris
      Those prepared by art or chemically: as vitriol of Jupiter, of the Moon, of Mars, of the Sun, of Venus

Declension

Third-declension noun, singular only.

Case Singular
Nominative
Genitive ♃vis
Dative ♃vī
Accusative ♃vem
Ablative ♃ve
Vocative