It depends on which key signature. D major has 2 sharps. F# major has 6 sharps. Bb major has no sharps.
D major has two sharps - F♯ and C♯.
C major: no sharps, no flats F major: no sharps, B flat Bb (B flat) major: no sharps, B and E flat Eb major: no sharps; B, E, and A flat Ab major: no sharps; B, E, A, and D flat Db major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, and G flat Gb major/F# (F sharp) major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, G, and C flat / F, C, G, D, A, and E sharp; no flats B major: F, C, G, D, and A sharp; no flats E major: F, C, G, and D sharp; no flats A major: F, C, and G sharp; no flats D major: F and C sharp, no flats G major: F sharp, no flats
The major scale with 2 sharps is D major, they are F and C sharp.
D Major has two sharps which areF SharpC SharpYou can learn more about Major Scales and Sharps at the links below.
C major - No sharps or flats D major- 2 sharps (F,C) G major- 1 sharp (F) E major- 4 sharps (F,C,G,D)
It depends on which key signature. D major has 2 sharps. F# major has 6 sharps. Bb major has no sharps.
D major has 2 sharps: F and C. D minor has none; it has 1 flat.
D major has two sharps - F♯ and C♯.
two sharps on a violin mean your in the key of D. the sharps are F# and C#
C major: no sharps, no flats F major: no sharps, B flat Bb (B flat) major: no sharps, B and E flat Eb major: no sharps; B, E, and A flat Ab major: no sharps; B, E, A, and D flat Db major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, and G flat Gb major/F# (F sharp) major: no sharps; B, E, A, D, G, and C flat / F, C, G, D, A, and E sharp; no flats B major: F, C, G, D, and A sharp; no flats E major: F, C, G, and D sharp; no flats A major: F, C, and G sharp; no flats D major: F and C sharp, no flats G major: F sharp, no flats
The major scale with 2 sharps is D major, they are F and C sharp.
D Major has two sharps which areF SharpC SharpYou can learn more about Major Scales and Sharps at the links below.
The D major scale has F# and C#.
The sharps for a D Major scale are F# and C#. A good way to remember which order the sharps go in is to remember the acronym Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle (FCGDAEB). D Major has two sharps, so the sharps must be the first two--F# and C#. If you happen to know the sharps and not the key, simply add a half step to the very last sharp in the key signature. The last sharp in D Major is C#, and one half step above is D; therefore, the key with two sharps is D Major.
B Major (and G sharp minor) has five sharps, but B minor only has two sharps (like D major).
Two sharps is either D major or B minor.