The dominant is the 5th tone in the scale. In a D Major scale, the dominant is A.
The dominant of B is F#.
The dominant (5th) of F major is C major.
The dominant of Ab is Eb.
D, as this is the fifth note of the scale
F sharp major is the dominant of b minor.
B
A
D major(D,F#,A,D) for sub domonant, and E major(E,G#,B,E) for dominant
The dominant (fifth) degree of a D sharp major scale is A sharp.
The leading note of B major is A#.
In a major scale the subdominant chord is a major chord,thus the dominant chord is major7.
For bass clef, it is D. For treble clef, it is F. The way to remember what the dominant tone for any key is to count 4 notes above the 1st note. (the dominant is the 5th degree/note)
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. In the B Major scale, F is the dominant note.
The dominant of B is F#.
The dominant of B is F#.
Eb Major
The subdominant in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of B-flat major is E-flat.
A major. A B C# D E F# G# A
D major(D,F#,A,D) for sub domonant, and E major(E,G#,B,E) for dominant
The dominant key is the fifth note of the scale. For A major scale, this would be E.
I'm not entirely sure what your asking, but a B dominant chord consists of the notes B, D#, F#, and A.
The dominant in a scale is the 5th, which in the key of F# major is C#.
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. ie: in a C Major scale, G is the dominant note. The dominant is represented by the Roman Numeral "V" in music.
The dominant of A is E.