C minor has 3 flats, B#, E#, A#. B# becomes a natural in the harmonic scale.
There are two flats, B flat and E flat. It is the relative minor for B flat Major.
2. Eb and Bb
It depends on which key you are referring to, all the keys with flats are: F major (1 flat) B-flat major (2 flats) E-flat major (3 flats) A-flat major (4 flats) D-flat major (5 flats) G-flat major (6 flats) C-flat major (7 flats) Likewise the relative minors are: D minor (1 flat) G minor (2 flats) C minor (3 flats) F minor (4 flats) B-flat minor (5 flats) E-flat minor (6 flats) A-flat minor (7 flats)
The key of B flat major, or g G minor, has two flats. The flats are B flat and E flat.
C minor has 3 flats, B#, E#, A#. B# becomes a natural in the harmonic scale.
B flat Major has 2 flats and G Minor has 2 flats.
The B scale begins at D and has five flats. The E flat minor scale begins at F and has one flat.
There are two flats, B flat and E flat. It is the relative minor for B flat Major.
There aren't any sharps in c minor - there are three flats, b flat, e flat and a flat.
The key signature of the C minor scale has three flats: B flat, E flat, and A flat.
There are no flats in b-minor. B major has two flats, both B-flat and A-flat, but b-flat minor is the relative minor of D-major, which has a sharp key signature. The sharps in b-minor are F-sharp and C-sharp.
The scale that has 2 flats is the key of B flat major.
2. Eb and Bb
2. Eb and Bb
G minor contains two flats: B and E.
D flat major, or b flat minor. The flats are B, E, A, D and G, in that order.