Treble clef.
The swirl in the bottom half of the clef cirlces around the G line of the clef. It also looks a bit like a G.
Yes, the treble clef can also be known as the G clef, as the line that the circle of the clef is on, (the line second up from the bottom) is where the note of G is written.
The other designation for the bass clef is the 'F' clef.
The treble clef is also sometimes called the "G clef" because it evolved from an ornate letter "G." The hook on the front of the "G" loops around a staff line and designates it as the pitch "g" above middle "c."
The treble clef, which wraps around G on the staff.
Treble clef, because it indicates the position for G.
treble clef
The treble clef is also known as the 'g' clef. The bass clef is also known as the 'f' clef.
"G" Clef. It's called this because the little curly thing wraps around the G line on the music staff.
Solfadohang G.
The proper name for the treble clef in music is the G clef, because the clef is a kind of medieval way of writing the letter G. You can see the simililarities in the shape of the clef to the shape of the upper-case (G) and lower-case (g) letters. The curved shape of the clef wraps around the second line from the bottom of the stave as though it is saying something about this line. It is actually saying that any note on this line is a G. Similarly, the "bass" clef is more properly known as the F clef because it is, again, an old-fashioned way of writing the letter F. The two dots above and below the second line from the top of the stave is saying something about this line, namely, that a note written on this line is an F.
The bass clef is also known as the 'f' clef (because the line in-between the two dots is the note f). The treble clef is also known as the 'g' clef (because the line that the circle in the middle is on is the note g).