B flat
E Major - E, G#, B. B Major - B, D#, F#. C# Minor - C#, E, G#. A Major - A, C#, E.
G#
The answer to this question is not always simple, however if you want a definite answer, look at the tips below: If you wanted to end on a perfect cadence, you should modulate to a G major chord and then move down to the tonic chord (C major). If you wanted to end on a plagal cadence, you would modulate up a fourth to a F major chord and then resolve on a C major chord. If you wanted to end on am imperfect cadence you simply modulate to the dominant chord (in this case G major) and end there. Finally, if you wanted to end on an interrupted cadence you modulate from the tonic chord (C major) to the relative minor, an A minor chord. So in most cases a song which began in C major should end in the tonic key (C major), however a song in C major can end in G major (an imperfect cadence) or in A minor (an interrupted cadence). Hope this helps.
c d e f g a b c
C major is a major scale starting from C.
Major C and the Major C
No. A Major has a C# though. The key signature for A major is 3 sharps, F#, C# and G#.
The relative major to c minor is Eb major.
C# major, E major, A major, B major, and C# minor.
C Major scale: C D E F G A B C (no sharps or flats) C Major chord: C - E - G
C♯ Major, F♯ Major, B Major, E Major, A Major and D Major.
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.
There are no sharps in C major nor Flats.
All notes are natural in C major.
The keys of C major and A minor have no sharps or flats.
The C major scale is: C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C.