None, but there are six 8ths in a dotted half.
it depends on wich note is dotted
One half note equals four eighth notes.
A total of 8 eighth notes go into a double dotted half note
Dot adds a value to a note and rest. For example the note is dotted eighth note, the original value of the eighth note is 1/2 and since it is a dotted note we are going to get half of its value (1/4) and we will add it to the original value. So we will be able to have 1/2 plus 1/4 is equal to 3/4..
a dotted half note gets three beats. a "dot" adds half of the value of the note...for example half the value of a half note is one beat...so add that to the half note to get 3 beats
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
The dotted note is half again the value of the regular note.
A total of 8 eighth notes go into a double dotted half note
Whole rest, half rest, dotted half rest, quarter rest, dotted quarter rest, eighth rest, and dotted eighth rest are just some of the many rests.
Dot adds a value to a note and rest. For example the note is dotted eighth note, the original value of the eighth note is 1/2 and since it is a dotted note we are going to get half of its value (1/4) and we will add it to the original value. So we will be able to have 1/2 plus 1/4 is equal to 3/4..
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
a dotted half note gets three beats. a "dot" adds half of the value of the note...for example half the value of a half note is one beat...so add that to the half note to get 3 beats
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
The dotted note is half again the value of the regular note.
Any dotted note takes the value of the note and adds one-half the notes original value. Thus, a dotted 16th note takes the original 16th and adds on another 32nd making the total value 3/32nds.
Well. in a 4 pattern time signature, a dotted half note get s 3 full beats and eight notes get half a beat. therefore, 2 eighth notes equals one beat, and three sets of two (or 6 eighth notes) equals 3 beats, the same number of beats as a dotted half note. Just to be clear though: 6 eighth notes would not be played as the rythym pattern as a dotted half note.
It gets 3/4 of a beat. If you count in 4/4 meter, and the Dotted eighth note is on the first beat, it's count would be: 1 & 2 & etc. The action of the dot increases the value of the eighth note by half it's value. Half the value of an eighth note is a sixteenth note. So a dotted eighth note = eighth note + sixteenth note A good website that illustrates how dots work is: http://www.8notes.com/school/theory/dots_and_ties.asp -Mimi
half the regular value
The dotted minim is a minim note in which the time value is extended by a half of its value by a dot.