C is the roman numeral for 100.
$200
The last note on a piano is an A.
1)tone,2)supertonic,3)mediant,4)subdominant,5)dominant,6)submediant,7)leading note,8)tonic. Each note has a name. A,B,C,D,E,F,G. They can be in a scale, ascending, or going up the scale, or descending, going down in the scale. You can flat, or sharp each note. Such as "Ab", or "A#". You can assign a song to a key, such as the key of "C". There are many terms you may associate with any given note. You can pick out the note that happens to be the sixth note of the song. You can call out intervals, such as a "Third" which is three notes apart. "C" to "E" is a third if you are talking intervals. Notes are relevant. Which term do you wish to convey?
If you have a Bfootjoint... the lowest note is a B natural, one note below Middle C. If you have a Cfootjoint.. the lowest note is a C natural or Middle C.
No, the A is not the same as B sharp. B sharp would be the C note since there are no music notes between B and C. The C note would only be called a "B sharp" if C sharp is used in a key, since proper music note naming only allows for one note of each base name ("accidental" notes excluded). So rather than have two types of C notes, you would have a type of B note and a type of C note.
A c-note is a nickname for a hundred dollar bill. The "c" in c-note stands for "century," which is another word for a hundred. This term likely originated from the Roman numeral "C" for 100.
$200
That's a "C-note", in reference to the Roman Numeral "C" that designates 100.
The term, "root" in Musical terms means the note that the rest of a chord is based around. For example, a C major chord which consists of the notes C, E and G would have a root note of C as it the note that allows the rest of a chord to follow. It is always the first note of any chord.
I think what you are asking about, is a British musical term--the C-R-O-T-C-H-E-T. This is equal to a quarter note, which is one fourth of a whole note.
The last note on a piano is an A.
how do you play a c on the recorder
9 ,16 ,23, 30 We note that there is a difference of '7' between terms. So the first part of the 'nth' term is 7n. Note the '7' becomes multiple. Next we need to find the constant 'c' So taking the first term (n = 1) we write. 7n + c = 9 7(1) + c = 9 7 + c = 9 c = 2 So the 'nth' term is '7n + 2' To verify , try the 3rd term n= 3 then answer should be '23'. 7(3) + 2 = 21 + 2 = 23 As required.
on the C flute, the highest note is C
The flour mixture, also slang for money, is spelled dough, and rhymes with the term for a female dear, doe, and the first note of the musical scale, C, which is spelled do.The interjection, popularized by The Simpsons dad Homer, is spelled "D'oh!"
c at da top of the clarinet e at tha top f at tha top e again hold it as a whole note repeat this again then rest c at tha top e at tha top f at tha top hold e as a half note hold e again as a half note c as a half note e as a half note d as a whole note e as a note e again d as a note c as half rest c again as a note e half note g as a note g again g half note f as a half note rest f e f e half note c half note another c half d half the whole note c rest c e f e half note c half note e half note f half note e whole note e rest c
C-Note - band - was created in 1997.