They sound the same, but are different on a staff. An augmented 6th up from C would be A sharp. A diminished 7th up from C would be B flat. A sharp and B flat are enharmonic. It usually depends on what the question is and/or what key you are in.
A graduated tone is a tone that fades smoothly from one shade to another across an area. They are often made by varying the pressure on the tool used to make the tone, but can also be made by using overlapping layers of the medium used to make the tone.
Tone room is an application used on a mobile device to purchase ringtones
Yes, blue is an Earth tone because the world has oceans and the oceans are blue and if the Earth has blue oceans then blue is an Earth tone.
In flat slab you save time formwork of beams.
The leading tone is one half-step below the tonic, so in the key of B-flat the leading tone is A.
B-flat
Phonetically (not pinyin), it sounds like: ee fin zhongee = first inflection "--" (flat tone)fin = first inflection "--" (flat tone)zhong = first inflection "--" (flat tone)
Not its half a tone lower - On a treble scale the A key (note) will be in increasing tone; Ab(A flat), A (A natural) A# (A Sharp)
E flat D Flat C <3
B flat
No, it actually raises the tone by a half step. A flat lowers it.
It is called a "natural" sign, and it cancels out/naturalizes a sharp or a flat.
B flat clarinet.
It lowers the tone by one half step.
A double flat is a tone lower than the natural note.
Moonlight in Chinese is "Yue Guang". The tone of Yue is go down, and the tone of Guang is flat.