![]() If two simultaneous notes are slightly out-of-tune, the lower-pitched one (assuming the higher one is properly pitched) is "flat" with respect to the other. In intonation, flat can also mean "slightly lower in pitch" (by some unspecified amount). To allow extended just intonation, composer Ben Johnston uses a sharp as an accidental to indicate a note is raised 70.6 cents (ratio 25:24), and a flat to indicate a note is lowered 70.6 cents. In any other tuning system, such enharmonic equivalences in general do not exist. Under twelve-tone equal temperament, D♭ for instance is enharmonically equivalent to C♯, and G♭ is equivalent to F♯. For instance, the music below has a key signature with three flats (indicating either E♭ major or C minor) and the note, D♭, has a flat accidental. In musical notation, flat means "lower in pitch by one semitone (half step)", notated using the symbol ♭ which is derived from a stylised lowercase 'b'. Flat is the opposite of sharp, which is a raising of pitch. In music, flat (Italian bemolle for "soft B") means "lower in pitch". The Wikipedia has the following information about this codepoint: for search in emoji pickers: bemolle, flat, music, note. The CLDR project labels this character “flat” for use in screen reading software. ![]() It has type Other for sentence and Other for word breaks. In text U+266D behaves as Ambiguous (Alphabetic or Ideographic) regarding line breaks. In bidirectional context it acts as Other Neutral and is not mirrored. This character is a Other Symbol and is commonly used, that is, in no specific script. It belongs to the block U+2600 to U+26FF Miscellaneous Symbols in the U+0000 to U+FFFF Basic Multilingual Plane. U+266D was added to Unicode in version 1.1 (1993). Copy to clipboard share this codepoint embed this codepoint
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