The same note name, yes. They could possibly be different pitches.
Circle.
A circle as such does not have a start point nor an end point. We do however have to start at one point and end at the same point when we draw a perfect circle, but after it is drawn, the actual circle does not have a start nor an end. We might be able to see where we started and ended but this is of no significance to the actual start/end point of the circle as the circle itself does not have any.
If the graph start and end with same vertex and no other vertex can be repeated then it is called trivial graph.
All I can see right away is that they start and end with the same number.
Total Distance: Distance from some fixed point at end - Distance from the same fixed point at start. Total Time: Time at end - Time at start. Not sure what is meant by "calculate them altogether".
A song usually begins and starts in the same key, but it doesn't always have to start and end with the same note. However, the last note of a melody can help you guess the key in which that melody was written. For example, if we have a song and it ends with a C, than the key should be C major or minor. The chord formed on the tonic note -(the tonic being C, in our example) is the most significant chord in a key. To maintain the tonality, our song should finish with the C note (which is the first note of the tonic chord) and start with a note which is contained in the tonic chord (either C, E/Eb, or G). Most of the composers prefer to start with the first note of the chord, so that's why there numerous cases in which the music starts and ends with the same note.
A closed pathway where teh start and end points are the same is called an electric circuit.
Some longer than average words that start and end with the same letter are:straightforwardnessexperiencemilitarismmulticulturalismexterminatesuperfluousnesscatastrophicarachnophobiacharacteristicdecaffeinateddisenfranchisedexcommunicategrandstandinggroundbreakinglackadaisicalnationalizationnewspaperwomanproprietorshipspontaneousnesstranscendentalisttranscriptionist
Twilight
Circle.
The same as any instrument. You can start on any note and end on any note. An octave starting on C would be: C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B, C.
their is no end
yes
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end note
A Maze
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