Yes, but neither key is often used. They will usually be replaced by A major and F# minor, which sound the same.
The relative major key of Gb minor is Bbb (double-flat). However to make life easier, one could just say the minor key is F# minor and then the relative major would be A.
F# minor is relative to A major, so Gb minor is essentially the same, although they're probably looking for B double flat major or something useless like that.
The relative major to C minor is E-flat major.
A flat minor is the relative minor of B major
F Major has a relative minor scale of D Minor.
A flat major
C minor
The relative minor of Eb Major is C minor.
Relative major and minor share the same key signature but a different tonic note (a tonic note is the first note of the scale or in solfege tonic is DO). For example, D flat major has five flats in it's key signature and b flat minor has 5 flats in it's key signature; therefore, D flat major and b flat minor are relative.
Start in C major, parallel minor is C minor, relative major is E-flat major, parallel minor is E-flat minor, enharmonic respelling is D-sharp minor (which has 6 sharps).
There are two flats, B flat and E flat. It is the relative minor for B flat Major.
It isn't. The tonic of the relative minor is a minor third below the tonic of the major scale. C major and A minor, G major and E minor, for example. Harmonically speaking, B flat minor is the relative minor of D flat major.While the tones of C sharp and D flat are indistinguishable in equal temperament, the representations of their scales on a score are not the same at all. So it means something to keep from mixing the sharps and flats when dealing with standard harmony. The relative minor of C sharp major would be A sharp minor, a very odd key to be sure, since it includes three notes that are each double-sharped. Why bother? Stay with the flat alternatives.