Speaking Head In Silhouette Copy and Paste
Select and copy π£. Paste the complete sequence, then verify that U+1F5E3 remains intact in the destination.
Use the homepage to browse what is the at symbol called across the wider symbol library.
- 1Copy
Press the button to copy π£.
- 2Place the cursor
Open the message, document, form, or profile where you need it.
- 3Paste
Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.
What Is the Speaking Head In Silhouette?
The speaking-head silhouette suggests speech, narration, conversation, or a person talking. It differs from a microphone, loudspeaker, audio-volume control, and speech balloon.
messages
speech labels
conversation notes
accessibility text
interface prompts
Related forms
Speaking Head In Silhouette Variants and Related Forms
Envelope
written message
Telephone
voice communication
Bullet
neutral comparison
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Person Swimming Emoji (π)
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Person Cartwheeling Emoji (π€Έ)
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Bath Emoji (π)
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How to Type the Speaking Head In Silhouette
Choose your device or app to insert the speaking head in silhouette without copying it from another page.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Windows
Copy π£ from this page. Character Map may help with supported characters; verify the full sequence U+1F5E3 after pasting.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Mac
Copy π£ or use Character Viewer where available, then confirm that the full sequence U+1F5E3 is present.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on iPhone and iPad
Press and hold π£, choose Copy, and verify the pasted sequence in the destination app.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Android
Press and hold π£, tap Copy, and confirm every component of U+1F5E3 after pasting.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Chromebook
Copy π£ from this page or use the character picker, then verify the result in the target field.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Microsoft Word
Paste π£ into Word and confirm that the selected font supports every code point in U+1F5E3.
Speaking Head In Silhouette on Google Docs
Paste π£ into Google Docs or use Insert β Special characters where available, then inspect the final rendering.
Speaking Head In Silhouette Unicode and HTML Codes
Use these values when you need the speaking head in silhouette in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.
U+1F5E3
SPEAKING HEAD IN SILHOUETTE
🗣
🗣
1F5E3
How to Use and Format the Speaking Head In Silhouette
Format π£ according to the page-specific role of Talking Symbol. Talking Symbol documents π£ for messages and speech labels. The encoded sequence is U+1F5E3; its Unicode names are SPEAKING HEAD IN SILHOUETTE. Preserve every component, including capitalization, spaces, superscripts, punctuation, variation selectors, or zero-width joiners. In messages, introduce the form with a readable label. In speech labels, retain the convention used by the source. In conversation notes, verify that the chosen font supports the complete sequence.
Talking Symbol is limited to the encoded form π£ in communication. The Talking Symbol page excludes image-only signs, collections, logos, and unrelated meanings. For web publishing, use selectable UTF-8 where practical, test copy-and-paste behavior, and provide an accessible name when the surrounding text does not already state βTalking Symbol.β Check the final output in the website, document, spreadsheet, equation editor, export format, and assistive-technology workflow rather than approving a merely similar-looking substitute such as β or β.
In messages, define π£ as Talking Symbol before relying on the character alone.
Preserve the complete sequence U+1F5E3; do not remove spaces, component letters, superscripts, joiners, or variation selectors.
Apply this intent boundary in speech labels: Talking Symbol is limited to the encoded form π£ in communication. The Talking Symbol page excludes image-only signs, collections, logos, and unrelated meanings.
Compare π£ with β and β before selecting a visually similar form.
Use literal UTF-8 or the numeric references 🗣 and 🗣 so the result remains searchable and selectable.
Provide the accessible text label βTalking Symbolβ whenever π£ appears without explanatory wording.
Test talking symbol in the final font, mobile layout, copied text, PDF export, and screen-reader output before publication.
Speaking Head In Silhouette Examples
Talking Symbol: π£Messages β π£Speech Labels: Talking Symbol π£π£ talking symbol referenceConversation Notes [π£]Copy form: π£Code points: U+1F5E3HTML decimal: 🗣HTML hexadecimal: 🗣Accessible label: Talking Symbol
Common Speaking Head In Silhouette Mistakes
- Using β where π£ is required changes the reviewed intent for Talking Symbol.
- Dropping part of U+1F5E3 while copying talking symbol.
- Treating π£ as interchangeable with β without checking the destination convention.
- Leaving π£ unexplained in messages when readers can assign another meaning.
- Assuming every font, browser, or emoji renderer displays Talking Symbol exactly like the preview.
- Converting π£ to an image even though searchable, selectable text is appropriate.
- Ignoring this page boundary: Talking Symbol is limited to the encoded form π£ in communication. The Talking Symbol page excludes image-only signs, collections, logos, and unrelated meanings.
- Using π£ as the only accessible name of a control, formula, status, category, or technical label.
Exact Unicode identity
Speaking Head: exact identity and scope
π£ depicts a speaking head in silhouette. Common uses include speech, talking, announcements, or communication. The character is not presented as the only possible symbol for βtalking symbolβ.
Accessible use
Label Speaking Head when the context is not obvious
When π£ carries information or performs an action, identify it as Speaking Head in nearby text or an accessible name so the intended use is not inferred from appearance alone.
More About the Speaking Head In Silhouette
π£ is Speaking Head in Silhouette, encoded as U+1F5E3 (SPEAKING HEAD IN SILHOUETTE). The speaking-head silhouette suggests speech, narration, conversation, or a person talking. It differs from a microphone, loudspeaker, audio-volume control, and speech balloon. For Speaking Head in Silhouette, π£ is encoded as U+1F5E3, and its Unicode name is SPEAKING HEAD IN SILHOUETTE. Practical contexts for π£ include messages, speech labels, conversation notes, accessibility text. For Speaking Head in Silhouette, meaning comes from the sentence, formula, label, or interface where it appears. Examples for Speaking Head in Silhouette include Talking Symbol: π£; Messages β π£; Speech Labels: Talking Symbol π£; π£ talking symbol reference. These forms show how the character behaves in finished text. Avoid these common Speaking Head in Silhouette problems: Dropping part of U+1F5E3 while copying talking symbol; Treating π£ as interchangeable with β without checking the destination convention; Leaving π£ unexplained in messages when readers can assign another meaning. When preparing final Speaking Head in Silhouette text, follow these checks: In messages, define π£ as Talking Symbol before relying on the character alone; Preserve the complete sequence U+1F5E3; do not remove spaces, component letters, superscripts, joiners, or variation selectors; Compare π£ with β and β before selecting a visually similar form. Speaking Head in Silhouette on Windows: Copy π£ from this page. Character Map may help with supported characters; verify the full sequence U+1F5E3 after pasting. Speaking Head in Silhouette on Mac: Copy π£ or use Character Viewer where available, then confirm that the full sequence U+1F5E3 is present. Speaking Head in Silhouette on iPhone: Press and hold π£, choose Copy, and verify the pasted sequence in the destination app.
Continue exploring: Adult Emoji (π§) , Runner Emoji (π) , Person Swimming Emoji (π) and Person Cartwheeling Emoji (π€Έ) . You can also browse all symbols.
Speaking Head In Silhouette FAQ
What is the copyable form for Talking Symbol?
This page uses π£, encoded as U+1F5E3, for the reviewed communication intent.
How do I copy π£?
Copy the complete sequence π£ and verify that every component in U+1F5E3 remains after pasting.
Which HTML form reproduces Talking Symbol?
Use literal UTF-8 π£, decimal references 🗣, or hexadecimal references 🗣.
Why can π£ look different across devices?
Fonts, shaping engines, and emoji renderers can change appearance while the encoded sequence U+1F5E3 remains unchanged.
Can I replace π£ with β?
Only when the destination convention requires that alternative. Talking Symbol is limited to the encoded form π£ in communication. The Talking Symbol page excludes image-only signs, collections, logos, and unrelated meanings.