If it is 4/4 time, then it gets 1/4 of that quarter note. So meaning there would be 16 sixteenth notes in a measure if you filled the bar with sixteenth notes.
The clue is in the name of the note. The sixteenth (or semiquaver) is one-sixteenth of a whole note (or semibreve). Look at the time signature of your piece of music: a semiquaver rest will occupy exactly the same number of beats as a semiquaver note. For example, if your piece is in 4/4 time, it will occupy a quarter of a beat.
In standard time it is worth one beat.
In 3/4 time (whether you are playing a piano or a kazoo), there are 3 beats to the measure and a quarter note gets one beat. There are four sixteenth notes to a quarter note so the sixteenth note gets 1/4 of a beat or, another way to look at it is it takes 4 sixteenths to make a beat.
I think it's 28 -- there are four sixteenth notes in one quarter note times seven beats in the measure. However, I've never heard of a time signature with seven beats, so it's probably not very relevant. Also, this answer assumes each beat is a quarter note (not, say, a dotted quarter or an eight).
how many beats are there in a treble clef? there are no beats in the treble clef because it shows what notes are on the staff. if you had the bass clef then the notes would be different on the staff.
A triplet has three beats.
3.
1
A sixteenth note receives 1/4 of a beat. It is referred to as a "sixteenth note" because it takes sixteen of them to create 4 beats. Most songs contain 4 beat measures known as "common time."
The clue is in the name of the note. The sixteenth (or semiquaver) is one-sixteenth of a whole note (or semibreve). Look at the time signature of your piece of music: a semiquaver rest will occupy exactly the same number of beats as a semiquaver note. For example, if your piece is in 4/4 time, it will occupy a quarter of a beat.
In 4 4 time, it would get 3/4 of a beat.
In standard time it is worth one beat.
In 3/4 time (whether you are playing a piano or a kazoo), there are 3 beats to the measure and a quarter note gets one beat. There are four sixteenth notes to a quarter note so the sixteenth note gets 1/4 of a beat or, another way to look at it is it takes 4 sixteenths to make a beat.
I think it's 28 -- there are four sixteenth notes in one quarter note times seven beats in the measure. However, I've never heard of a time signature with seven beats, so it's probably not very relevant. Also, this answer assumes each beat is a quarter note (not, say, a dotted quarter or an eight).
how many beats are there in a treble clef? there are no beats in the treble clef because it shows what notes are on the staff. if you had the bass clef then the notes would be different on the staff.
A dotted quaver (dotted eighth note) is worth 1.5 beats, while a semi quaver (sixteenth note) is worth 0.25 beats. When you add them together, a dotted quaver plus a semi quaver equals 1.5 + 0.25, which totals 1.75 beats.
An eighth triplet note is worth one-third of a beat in a 4/4 time signature. Triplets divide a beat into three equal parts, so when you have an eighth note triplet, each note within the triplet gets this value. Thus, if you consider a standard eighth note worth half a beat, an eighth triplet note is one-third of that, equating to approximately 0.166 beats.