Part alternation mark emoji SVG
Used in traditional Japanese music such as Noh or Renga, to indicate the start of a song. More specifically, the part alternation mark is displayed where the singer’s part begins. This symbol looks sort of like a lopsided capital M; or a rollercoaster track showing a dip, and then a drop off to the right. Part Alternation Mark was approved as part of Unicode 3.2 in 2002 and added to Emoji 1.0 in 2015.
Description from EmojipediaWhat does the part alternation mark emoji mean?
It indicates a change in speaker or topic in a text-based conversation.
The above meaning was generated by artificial intelligence. It may contain errors or inaccuracies, or be entirely untrue.Copy the part alternation mark emoji
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Use this emoji in your website
You can add the part alternation mark emoji to your website in a few ways. The first way is by using the unicode character, the emoji itself. This has the advantage of rendering immediately and it doesn't require any additional network requests. However, emoji characters don't always scale well and they are inconsistent across platforms.
<p>Here is my emoji: 〽️</p>
The second way is by using the emoji's HTML character reference, which has the same advantages and disadvantages of using the emoji itself.
<p>Here is my emoji: 〽</p>
The third way is by using an image to display the emoji. This works great if you want to display larger emojis, for example, to allow users to "react" to an article. We provide an Emoji API which you can use to display high-quality SVG or PNG emoji images on your website.
<p>Here is my emoji: <img src="https://www.emoji.family/api/emojis/303d/noto/svg" alt="" style="width: 1.2em; height: 1.2em;" /></p>