if you are talking about notes:
c
c sharp/ D flat
d
d sharp/ e flat
e
f
f sharp/ g flat
g
g sharp/ a flat
a
a sharp/ b flat
b
etc...
yes it can
Tones can be a noun or a verb. As a noun: The tones from the piano are quite beautiful. As a verb: Exercise tones up muscles.
3 halvtones which equals one and a half whole tones.
It's called a Melodica.
piano piano or pp and ff forty forty is the highest
Because it has a lot of keys, which allows for varied tones.
There are 8 key tones, and their various sharps and flats. You could technically say there are an infinite number of tones, but the ones on a regular 80-key piano are pretty much the only ones the human ear can hear, excepting, of course, the few that are lower and higher than a piano's range, and the slight variations of every sharp and flat in existence.
The piano has 88 keys because this range allows for the full expression of musical notes and melodies across a wide spectrum of pitches and tones.
The "whole tones" in music are most easily defined in the key of "C", due to the piano being the most commonly played musical instrument. On a piano, all of the "white" keys are whole tones, some separated by semi-tones, as shown by the "black" keys. In an octave, one will find seven "whole" tones, with eight in total due to a repetition of the starting tone at the end. There are five "semi-tones" (black keys) in between in each octave, after the first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth whole tones. "middle" C on a piano is ~260hz, while the ending tone on the octave is double this, at ~520hz, and each "whole" note interval in between progressively and incrementally is staged in between.
A tone on a piano is usually what it sounds like. For example, on keyboards, you can choose different tones. (to make your key sounds different, but the same sequence. like changing the sound to a saxophone)
The simplest way is to transpose everything down a third (three semi-tones) Also, the piano is tuned in concert and the alto saxophone, as you know, is in Eb.
The vibrating object on an electric piano is a speaker or transducer that generates sound waves by converting electrical signals into vibrations. These vibrations are then amplified and emitted as sound through the speaker, allowing the piano to produce audible tones.