What you are asking is "What is 6 beats to the measure or 6/8 time. The bottom number refers to an eighth note getting one beat-not an octave. i hope that is what you needed to know.
Octave
The 6th note is the octave of the first.
It depends on the time signature. If the time signature is x/4, the the whole note gets 4 beats. It also depends on where the dot is. If the dot is above the whole note, it gets two beats; if it is to the right of the whole note it gets six beats.
A semibreve is a whole note. In 4 pattern time signature, a dotted whole note gets six beats. In an 8 pattern time signature, it would get 12 beats, but I don't think you would ever see that.
6
Octave
The 6th note is the octave of the first.
Jack Chilton Cotton has written: 'Beats and combination tones at intervals between the unison and the octave'
It depends on the time signature. If the time signature is x/4, the the whole note gets 4 beats. It also depends on where the dot is. If the dot is above the whole note, it gets two beats; if it is to the right of the whole note it gets six beats.
In six-eight time, a quarter note gets two beats. (An eight note gets one.)
yes
A semibreve is a whole note. In 4 pattern time signature, a dotted whole note gets six beats. In an 8 pattern time signature, it would get 12 beats, but I don't think you would ever see that.
6
6|8 time means there are six beats in a measure, and the eighth note gets the count. So, there are six eighth note beats per measure in 6|8 time.
Yes, an Italian Sonnet consists of an octave (eight lines) followed by a sestet (six lines). The rhyme scheme typically follows the pattern ABBAABBA for the octave and either CDECDE or CDCDCD for the sestet.
An interval of eight notes is known as an octave.
I would call the police, then get a divorce lawyer.