i dont get your question reword it
6 sixteenth notes
Rule of Three: Each note value contains within it, three of the next smallest note. Ex: one Quarter note equals three Eight notes, and one Half note equals three Quarter notes. So a Sixteenth note equals three 32nd notes.
Twelve. Remember that the dot always adds one half of the original note to the total - so a dotted half note is three beats in length. (Cut a half note in half and you get a quarter, so a dotted half note is two beats for the half note and one beat for the quarter you added to it) So now you can take those three beats (Three quarter notes) and cut them in half, which is six eighth notes, and then cut that in half and get twelve sixteenth notes. Phew. I hope that made sense.
2 sixteenth notes make an 8th note
Four sixteenth notes can be played in the same duration as two eighth notes. This is because each eighth note is equivalent to two sixteenth notes, so when combining two eighth notes, you effectively have four sixteenth notes. Both groupings fill the same rhythmic space within a measure.
Two sixteenth notes take up the same amount of time/space as one eighth note.
A dotted eighth note is equal in duration to three sixteenth notes.
Rule of Three: Each note value contains within it, three of the next smallest note. Ex: one Quarter note equals three Eight notes, and one Half note equals three Quarter notes. So a Sixteenth note equals three 32nd notes.
Sixteenth
Rule of Three: Each note value contains within it, three of the next smallest note. Ex: one Quarter note equals three Eight notes, and one Half note equals three Quarter notes. So a Sixteenth note equals three 32nd notes.
There are 16 sixteenth notes in a whole note! Just as there are two half notes, one fourth note, etc., there are 16 sixteenth notes.
Sixteenth notes are these to the left. They are played 2x the speed that eighth notes are played.