g - a - b - c# - d# - e#
The G major scale in the same on any instrument, G, A, B, C, D, E, F♯ and G.
whole flax seeds 1 cup = about 180 g (I measured on my scale). I'm assuming the 250 g is for a liquid measure, but flax is lighter than water.
Look for the units on the Scale itself. It may either be milligrams or grams itself, depending upon your Digital scale. it would equal 3200 g on a scale
The G major scale only contains one sharp - F# so it's one of the easiest ones to learn G A B C D E F# G A B C D E F# G going up G F# E D C B A G F# E D C B A G coming down
For all musical instruments the G major scale has one sharped note (F), so the notes are: G, A, B, C, D, E, F sharp, G.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean by how many steps but I can explain a whole tone scale for you. A whole tone scale is comprised of all whole steps. For example: A B C# D# F G A or Bb C D E F# G# A# (which is Bb) So I guess there are 7 notes in the whole tone scale if that was what you were looking for.
You can start the whole tone scale on any note. Say you start on C, then it would be C, D, E, F#, G#, A#, C Those are six different notes that compose one whole tone scale. If you start on C#, then it would be C#, D#, F, G, A, B Those are the other six notes that make up the other whole tone scale. You can start a whole tone scale on any note.
It is a scale made up exclusively of whole steps, as distinct from the standard western diatonic scale that is built upon the structure whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half. For example, starting at E flat, the notes of a whole tone scale would be E flat, F, G, A, B, D flat.
The whole tone scale only uses full tones, therefore there are six notes per octave. Theoretically could can start a whole tone scale on any note but there are only 2 distinct scales. Whole tone scale starting on C: C, D, E, Gb, Ab, Bb, C Whole tone scale starting on Db: Db, Eb, F, G, A, B, Db Starting a whole tone scale on any of the other notes would merely be inversions of the scales mentioned above.
It's called a whole-tone scale. An example is C D E F# G# A# C.
Yes it uses the whole tone scale as there are no semitones in the melody. You are right.
One difference between a whole tone scale and a pentatonic scale is that a whole tone scale has 6 notes per octave while a pentatonic scale has 5 notes per octave. Another major difference is that a whole tone scale has all adjacent notes a whole step apart, while a pentatonic scale does not consist entirely of whole steps, and since a pentatonic scale is only defined as a scale with 5 notes per octave, there are many pentatonic scales that are possible.
Whole-Tone Scale
The G Major scale is as follows: G-A-B-C-D-E-F#-G It follows the typical major scale pattern of intervals: whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half
The whole-tone scale could be the opposite. Instead of ascending with half-steps, it ascends with whole-steps, resulting in a 7 note scale (counting both octaves). Ex: C D E F# G# A# B# (C) A B C# D# E# (F) G A
The whole tone scale is made up of exactly what it sounds like, a series of notes each a whole tone away from the other. Starting on F, a whole tone scale would consist of (1)F (2)G (3)A (4)B (5)C#/Db (6)D#/Eb, which would then finish with (7)F, right back where it started. So the sixth note (D#/Eb) is the interval of a minor 7th, or 10 semitones, away.
There are eight notes (steps) in a major musical scale. If whole steps are tones and half steps are semitones, then the order is tone, tone, semitone, tone, tone, tone, semitone.