The dominant is the 5th of the scale, so in G-sharp it's D-sharp.
G#
G#
C♯
Tonic - G#Supertonic - A#Mediant - B#Sub-dominant - C#Dominant - D#Sub-dominant - E#Leading note - FxTonic - G#
The dominant (fifth) degree of a D sharp major scale is A sharp.
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the Flute btw idk what instrument its on
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the flute btw idk what instrument its on
g sharp would be g sharp or a minor. d sharp would be d sharp or e flat. a sharp would be a sharp or b flat. c sharp would be c sharp or d flat. f sharp would be f sharp or g flat. e sharp would be e sharp or f slat for which there is no such note. and g natural would be g natural.
theres 1 sharp, g "sharp".
G-sharp is the same as A-flat.
No. It is only the dominant note in the scale of G.
G g g g f (sharp) g g f g a b a g g g g f (sharp) g g d ** repeat ** g a d d' c' b a b c' b a g f (sharp) g g f (sharp) g g d g a d d' c' b a b c' b a g f (sharp) g g f g a b a g g