I'm assuming you mean a half-diminished seventh, since half-diminished triads don't exist. Start with a diminished triad (stacked minor thirds, like C-Eb-Gb or F-Ab-Cb) and add a minor seventh (for the C chord, Bb; for the F chord, Eb).
You play your major chord, then lower the middle note a half step, and lower the top note a half step, and you have a diminished chord!
F diminished 7, B diminished 7, D diminished 7, and G# diminished 7 will all have these same four notes.F diminished ( Fdim )It's actually an F whole diminished 7th chord. It would be an F diminished chord if there were no 'd' in the cord. Also, the correct way to spell the chord would actually be like this:F-Ab (not G#)-Cb (not B)-Ebb (not D).All the pitches are correct, just not their names. Any F triad with any kind of 7th attached will be some alteration of the notes F-A-C-E. This is how people quickly identify chords based on the root.Hope that helps! just thought that would improve the answer a little bit.www.myspace.com/thekilnsbandANSWER:G#dim7
"Growing very much (louder)" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase cresc assai. The masculine singular gerund/noun and adverb represent the short form of crescendo assai in such music terminology's and theory's practical application as piano-playing. The pronunciation will be "KREY-shas-SEYE" for the short form and "krey-SHEN-do as-SEYE" for the long form in Italian.
D-flat, F, A-flat for the triad
If you're just playing the notes in order while you're making a chord, you're "strumming". If you're playing two or more notes within a chord configuration, you're playing a "triad".
Some people insist that a chord is three or more notes played together. Others insist that even two notes still make a chord. Opinions differ, and it is dependent on the terminology people wish to use to describe a chord.
The notes together depend on which type of C chord you want to play. C Major Notes are C, E, G C Minor Notes are C, E flat, G C Diminished Notes are C, E flat, and G flat C Augmented Notes are C, E, G sharp.
F diminished 7, B diminished 7, D diminished 7, and G# diminished 7 will all have these same four notes.F diminished ( Fdim )It's actually an F whole diminished 7th chord. It would be an F diminished chord if there were no 'd' in the cord. Also, the correct way to spell the chord would actually be like this:F-Ab (not G#)-Cb (not B)-Ebb (not D).All the pitches are correct, just not their names. Any F triad with any kind of 7th attached will be some alteration of the notes F-A-C-E. This is how people quickly identify chords based on the root.Hope that helps! just thought that would improve the answer a little bit.www.myspace.com/thekilnsbandANSWER:G#dim7
Chords CAn be spelled differently-- but they are still the same 'chords'. If 'the ingredients' are there, the chord is there.
No, "piano" is not plural. "Piano" is the singular form, and "pianos" is the plural form
Pianos is the plural form of piano.
Assuming that the question was meant to be about a chord (not chrod) and radius (not radious), the answer is no. A chord is a line joining two points on the circumference of a circle. One end of a radius is on the circumference but the other is at the centre.
The plural form for the singular noun piano is pianos.
The plural form for the noun piano is pianos.
A chord.
The genitive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: piano's
The singular form of "piano" is "piano." The word doesn't change when referring to one instrument.
The plural form for the singular noun piano is pianos.