That would be 'h'. In German musical notation, the letter b means what we call b flat, and 'h' means b natural. Why this is the case, I have no idea.
G
g
In Germany all the note names are the same as English note names except that Bb in German is B and B natural in German is H.
That is the convention for naming hurricanes and cyclones. The names alternate boy-girl-boy-girl, using the next letter of the alphabet. Originally only female names were used, but this could be views as rather sexist.
The fact that his father had broken the rule of looking at the naming sheet before the naming ceremony
Teogenes Velez
The boy's name is Morrocan Scott Carey and the girl's name is Monroe Carey.
There is no intrinsic difference. Either can be named using the names of any two points on them, or using any letter or symbol of any alphabet - including symbols that you have made up.
q and p
Names starting with the letters Q, U, X, Y and Z are not used for naming hurricanes.
No, "clarinet" is a noun, naming a particular type of musical instrument.
They started naming storms with letters from the Greek alphabet.
No. the music alphabet goes to "g" from a. then it stops and starts over from a. it never going past g. Yes, in fact there is! The Germans once used a system of naming musical notes which used the letter B for the note most people call B-flat. In that system, B natural was called H! The German composer Johann Sebastian Bach actually wrote a four note melody containing the notes Bb (B), A, C and B♮ (H), in order!
Seven (A, B, C, D, E, F and G).
In Germany all the note names are the same as English note names except that Bb in German is B and B natural in German is H.
Abseiling Biking Cooking Diving entertaining fishing gardening handicrafts investing jogging kite-flying letter-writing motor-boating naming oil-pulling painting questioning racing storytelling tattooing ufology vase designing writing xylophoning yatching zigzagging
That is the convention for naming hurricanes and cyclones. The names alternate boy-girl-boy-girl, using the next letter of the alphabet. Originally only female names were used, but this could be views as rather sexist.
After a period or when you are naming a person, place or thing
There are not enough names starting with U, Q, X, Y, or Z for them to work in the current naming system.