No. It is only the dominant note in the scale of G.
The fifth note of C major scale is G. The fifth note of any scale is always called the dominant.
The dominant scale/chord in music is that built on the 5th scale degree of the key. In C major, the dominant is G.
The tonic is the 1st note in the scale. For example, in the G major scale, G is the tonic.
There is actually no such thing as a "dominant scale", however you can use the notes of a dominant 7th chord as a scale and that can begin on any note, the dominant 7th chord in C major is G7 and G7 uses all white keys (G, B, D and F), the structure of a dominant 7th chord is the major triad plus the flatted 7th.
F sharp
The fifth note of C major scale is G. The fifth note of any scale is always called the dominant.
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. ie: in a C Major scale, G is the dominant note. The dominant is represented by the Roman Numeral "V" in music.
G
The dominant is the 5th note of the scale. e.g, in c majorCDEFGABC - G is the dominant
The dominant note in a G major scale is D. In music theory, the dominant note is the fifth note of the scale, which in the case of G major is D. This note is important because it creates tension and leads back to the tonic note, G, creating a sense of resolution and stability in the music.
D, as this is the fifth note of the scale
The fifth syllable (or note) on a music scale is called the dominant. For example: for the scale of C major, the fifth note (or dominant) would be G.
Dominant triads, which are built on the fifth (or dominant) note of the scale, are (almost) always major - even when written in a minor key. This is because the middle note (which is the 7th note of the scale - known as the leading note) is always raised by a chromatic semitone.For example:The C major dominant triad is composed of the notes G, B, and D.The a minor dominant triad is composed of the notes E, G#, and B. Although there are no accidentals in the key signature of this scale, the 7th note is raised from G-natural to G# in order to make it a harmonic scale.That's not to say that minor dominant triads don't exist, because they do. They're just rare. You might be able to find a minor dominant triad in a situation where the dominant triad is played in conjunction with a descending melodic line (i.e. where the 6th and 7th notes of the scale aren't raised).
Tonic - G#Supertonic - A#Mediant - B#Sub-dominant - C#Dominant - D#Sub-dominant - E#Leading note - FxTonic - G#
The dominant (fifth) degree of a D sharp major scale is A sharp.
When working with a scale and chord progressions, each chord used in the scale has a name. The chord built on the first note is the tonic and the chord built on the fifth note is the dominant. It provides a resolution when the music moves from the firth to the first chord. In the key of C, the chord built on the first note, C-E-G, is the tonic chord, and the fifth is based on G-B-D. The dominant is the second most important step in the scale after the tonic.
The dominant note in any scale (major or minor) is the 5th (V) note of the scale.I - TonicII - SupertonicIII - MediantIV - Sub-DominantV - DominantVI - Sub-mediantVII - Leading tone or leading noteIn the case of C major, the dominant note is G.The dominant of C is G.