Whenever you pick through a cord, rather than strumming the strings together all at once you individually strum each note of the chord.
basically a chord starting the music and repeating all the way through
If you mean what are the notes, it's E, G#, and B. Added: if you mean an E major chord.
If it's next to a chord (it usually is), it means to arpeggiate the chord. Instead of playing all the notes together at once, you would quickly "roll up" through the notes quickly. Basically, building the chord from bottom up, but fast.
Not sure what you mean. If you mean a suspension chord, that is a chord made up of the I, IV, and V of a scale. For instance, a Csus is C, F, G. There is also a Sus 2 chord, which is the I, II, and V of a scale. A Csus2 would be C, D, and G. However, that is normally just called a 2 chord.
In a circle, there are 1 or more chords, and only always 1 diameter. The diameter goes through the middle point in a circle and connects 2 points on a circle. A chord does not have to go through the middle, but can. The diameter always counts as a chord. So, either, both the chord and diameter are the same length, or the chord is shorter. I hope this answers your question! (:
Not sure what you mean by "in the middle of a circle". A chord must have each of its ends on the circumference of the circle. If a chord is such that is passes through the centre point of the circle, it is (the longest chord possible and is) called a diameter. Or to put it another way, a diameter of a circle is a chord which passes through the centre point of the circle.
The chord that passes through the centre is the biggest chord in a circle and it is the diameter.
The diameter is the chord (line that goes from the circle to the circle) that goes through the center of the circle. It is the largest chord. It is also equal to twice the radius.
The chord that runs through the middle of a circle is called the diameter.
A diameter is a chord that passes through the circle's center.
The chord in an aircraft is the cross-section of the wing.
Not sure what you mean, but if you mean A/C, that means an A chord played over a C in the bass.
basically a chord starting the music and repeating all the way through
No, the cord of a circle does not have to go through the center of that circle. A chord that does go through the center of a circle is a special case and is called the diameter. A chord can connect any two points on a circle.
If you mean what are the notes, it's E, G#, and B. Added: if you mean an E major chord.
A chord is any line segment that connect two points of a circle. If a chord passes through the center of the circle it is called the DIAMETER of the circle. The diameter of any circle is the longest chord of that circle as well.
If a chord goes thru the center of a circle, it is the diameter