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\[CurlyPi]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 03D6. Aliases: Esc cp Esc, Esc cpi Esc. Greek letter. Not commonly used, except in astronomy.
\[CurlyRho]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 03F1. Aliases: Esc cr Esc, Esc crho Esc. Greek letter.
\[Dash]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 2013. Alias: Esc - Esc. Letter-like form.
\[Delta]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 03B4. Aliases: Esc d Esc, Esc delta Esc. Greek letter.
\[DescendingEllipsis]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 22F1. Letter-like form. Used to indicate omitted elements in a matrix. Not the same as \[Continuation].
\[Diameter]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 2300. Letter-like form. Used in geometry. Not the same as \[CapitalOSlash] or \[EmptySet].
\[Diamond]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: 22C4. Alias: Esc dia Esc. Infix operator. x ⋄ y is by default interpreted as Diamond[x,y].
\[DiscretionaryLineSeparator]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F76E. Alias: Esc dlsep Esc. Spacing character. Used to invisibly denote a place where automatic line breaking should be allowed.
\[Divides]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F3D0. Alias: Esc divides Esc. Infix operator with built-in evaluation rules. m∣n is by default interpreted as Divisible[n,m].
\[DotlessJ]   (Mathematica Character Name)
Unicode: F700. Letter. Used when a j will have an overscript on top. May or may not match the ordinary j from the text font.
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