It is called B. The english B is called H. The origin of this supposedly was a copying error (handwritten) which made an h out of a b.
(b+h)(b+h)= b2+2hb+h2.
b/h
You cannot. If the base is B and the height is H any of the following will give an area of 13: B = 13, H = 1 B = 130, H = 0.1 B = 1300, H = 0.01 etc. Or, B = 6.5, H = 2 B = 65, H = 0.2 etc Or B = 2.6, H = 5 B = 26, H = 0.5 etc I hope you get the idea.
v=B*H B= area of the Base so... v= (b*h)*h
H is what the Germans call the note B. B is what they call B-flat. That is why Bach could spell out his name in notes... Bflat-A-C-B.
B
B is the German spelling for B-flat. Then their B-natural is H.
Actually, there is! German music uses letters A-H instead of A-G, it's not that there are different notes, it's just that the note they call B is actually a Bb, and H is the same as B natural.
In Germany all the note names are the same as English note names except that Bb in German is B and B natural in German is H.
Because the note of B-natural is spelled H in German.
Yes, but it is equivalent to the English "B-flat". The B natural is denoted "H".
Because there are only 7 notes. Actually in German music - the note which we call B is called "H" and the note Bb is called "B".
Yes, it's either B or B flat. Bach used it to spell his name.
In the German note naming system, believe it or not, H major DOES exist, because what they call H we call B (natural) and what they call B we call B (flat).
H is the German notation for B flat so still just 5 lines on the stave
H