The relative major of G-sharp minor is B major. This relationship is established because the relative major key is a minor third above the minor key, which in this case means that B major shares the same key signature (five sharps) as G-sharp minor.
G Major or e minor. The sharp would be F sharp.
The key with 6 flats is G flat major (this is the same as the key with 6 sharps: F sharp major). The relative minor is e flat minor (also called d sharp minor).
That would be the key of A-sharp minor, the relative to C-sharp major, which contains seven sharps. The leading tone is G-double-sharp.
Four key signatures have G sharp and E sharp in them: F sharp Major, D sharp minor, C sharp Major and A sharp minor.
No key signatures contain only those three sharps. With the A-sharp, it could be the keys of B major, F-sharp major, or C-sharp major (or any of their relative minor keys).
f sharp
The key of E minor has one sharp: F sharp. It is the relative minor of G Major.
The relative minor of Eb Major is C minor.
E Minor is the relative minor to G Major.
E Minor is the relative minor to G Major.
In A harmonic minor, there is just one sharp (G sharp).
The relative minor key of G major is E minor.
The relative minor to G Major is E minor.
The relative minor of E major is C# minor.
The relative minor of a G major chord on the guitar is E minor.
The corresponding minor key to G Major is e minor. The key signature will be the same, one sharp: F#.
It's not a major, it's a minor. The relative minor of B major is G# minor.