There are four sharps in C sharp minor.
These sharps are C# D# F# and G#.
The harmonic minor also has B#. (which is C)
That would be the key of A-sharp minor, the relative to C-sharp major, which contains seven sharps. The leading tone is G-double-sharp.
The key of A minor contain's no sharps or flats and as such is related to the key of C major (all white notes on the piano for both). This relationship is why it's called the "relative minor" of C major.
The key that contains six sharps is c sharp.
There are six sharps in F sharp major.
The key with 6 flats is G flat major (this is the same as the key with 6 sharps: F sharp major). The relative minor is e flat minor (also called d sharp minor).
That would be the key of A-sharp minor, the relative to C-sharp major, which contains seven sharps. The leading tone is G-double-sharp.
A major has 3 sharps, A minor has no sharps or flats.
The key of A minor contain's no sharps or flats and as such is related to the key of C major (all white notes on the piano for both). This relationship is why it's called the "relative minor" of C major.
B major, or G sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D and A. F#, C#, G#, D#, A#
In major 'sharp' keys, you find the key by counting up one line or space from the last sharp, e.g is the last sharp is D-sharp, the key is E major.For minor keys it is a little bit different, if you have 3 or more sharps you count the THIRD TO LAST sharp in the key (e.g if you have 5 sharps, and F-sharp is the third-to-last sharp, the key is going to be G-sharp minor. For minor keys with less than three sharps, you subtract three sharps from the major key. B major has 5 sharps, whilst B minor has only two, so five minus three equals two.I hope this answers your question.
C sharp major, or A sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, A, E and B.C# Major does
B Major and G sharp minor. The sharps are F, C, G, D, and A sharp, in that order.
There are five key signatures with G sharp, they are: A major/F♯ minor (3 sharps) E major/ C♯ minor (4 sharps) B major/G♯ minor (5 sharps) F♯ major/D♯ minor (6 sharps) C♯ major/A♯ minor (7 sharps)
The key of G-sharp minor has 5 sharps (it's the relative to B major). G-flat minor is a key that only exists in theory, because that key signature would contain 9 flats. The limit on flats or sharps in a key is 7.
There are six sharps in F sharp major.
The key that contains six sharps is c sharp.
E natural minor has one sharp on F. The key signature is the same as G major.