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In music notation, Dal segno ( or ; (:dal ˈseɲɲo)), often abbreviated D.S., is used as a navigation marker. From Italian for "from the sign," D.S. appears in sheet music and instructs a musician to repeat a passage starting from the sign shown at right, sometimes called the "segno" in English.〔Percy Scholes (1970) ''The Oxford Companion to Music'', 10th edition, Oxford University Press, p. 273.〕 Two common variants: *D.S. al coda instructs the musician to go back to the sign, and when ''Al coda'' or ''To coda'' is reached jump to the coda symbol. *D.S. al fine instructs the musician to go back to the sign, and end the piece at the measure marked ''fine''. Al segno indicates that the player should go to the sign. In operas of the 18th century, da segno arias were a common alternative to da capo arias which began with an opening ritornello, which was then omitted in the repeat (the sign being placed after the ritornello). ==Encoding== The ''Segno'' sign is encoded in the Musical Symbols block of Unicode as U+1D10B MUSICAL SYMBOL SEGNO:〔(PDF of Musical Symbols block from the unicode consortium )〕 𝄋 *Coda *Repeat sign *Da capo 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「dal segno」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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