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the root of a f chord could be f i hope!
That is called the "base" of the chord. Try not to get this word confused with "root," which is the lowest note of the chord if it is in root position. Root position is when the chord is built up in thirds. Ex: C, E and G make up the C chord and the root of the chord "C" is also the base note. If this same C chord is mixed around so that G is the lowest note then higher in order is C and then E, then G would be the base note of the chord.
The root note on a guitar is the same thing as the root note on any other instrument. If you are playing a C chord, C is the root. With a G chord, G is the root, and so on.
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.
It means the root of the chord is the lowest note being played. If it's a C-major chord, the C is on the bottom.
There are two main triad types (chords) that contain a perfect fifth between the root and the fifth: the major chord and the minor chord. The major chord is created by starting with a note (the root), adding a major third on top of that, and adding a minor third on top of that note. A C major chord would look like this: C, E, G (with the E and the G stacked on top of the C). The minor chord is created by starting with a note (again, the root), adding a minor third, and then adding a major third--just the opposite of a major chord. A C minor chord would look like this: C, Eb (E-flat), G.
Learn the fretboard starting with the 5&6 strings, since these are usually the root note of the chord and will give you the name of the chord. Every player should have a good chord diagram book, the thicker the book the better. Then use this book and learn every chord you can.
The bass
It simply means only play the root and the fifth of the chord, so in this case, Bb and F, no D (3rd) or a variation of the A (7th) in it
It sounds like just Eminor, in the root position.
Dorsal root ganglia of the spinal chord gray matter.
That could be subjective depending on the style of music but generally, the root is most important because it signifies what chord it is and the third is second most important because it will show that it is either major or minor. It you have a M3 (4 half steps) interval between the root and third, you have a major chord. If you have a m3 (3 half steps) between the root and third, you have a minor chord. This is if you have a third tone to go with those two notes. If I were to play a 7th chord and needed to drop one note, I would drop the 5th.