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Bass guitar strings are tuned to the same notes as the thickest four strings of an electric guitar, but they are tuned one octave lower. So, the same notes, but one octave "deeper".
No. Bass is tuned in fourths, so going up you have E-A-D-G. Cello is tuned in fifths so you have C-G-D-A.
The ukulele is tuned differently then the bass. The baritone ukulele is tuned like the bottom 4 strings of a normal guitar.
It will have the basic G, C, E, A tuning, with the two additional strings. These are paired with the C and A strings. The second "A" string is tuned to the same note as the other "A" string. The additional "C" string is going to be either an octave up or down. The strings in order will be G, C, C', E, A, A.
no, tuned means you change the note or pitch pitch means how high or low somethings sound is.
no
its the same (but double bass strings are a whole lot more expensive).
The strings on a normal ukulele are tuned GCEA going top to bottom. If you have a piano or a G tuning fork, use it to play the note g then try to tune the g on the ukulele to sound like the note you pressed on the piano then do the same with c,e,and a.
i think many are the same and tuned but some lower notes are thicker so they can go lower and higher ones are thinner and then just tunned to secific notes
A cello has 4 strings. Cellos are tuned in fifths, starting with C2 (two octaves below middle C) as the lowest string, followed by G3, D4, and A4. It is tuned the same way as the viola, only an octave lower.
I assume you mean a chord. You can do this by placing fingers on both strings that you want to play and playing the strings at the same time.
Only note by note. It's only instruments with keys or strings that can play the notes of a chord at the same time.