A parallel Major/minor is a major and minor key that has the same letter name. Example: C Major an c minor.
The parallel minor key is that which has the same tonic note. So, the parallel minor to F major is F minor.
G minor
No. Parallel key signatures share the same tonic, or starting note. Relative minor/major are the scales that share a key signature.
That would be the relative major or minor (example: C major and A minor).
Fo Sure its G sharp. remember, if you don't know, the minor is always 3 semitones down.
Parallel major and minor keys have the same tonic pitch. Therefore, E minor is the parallel minor of E Major.
The parallel minor key is that which has the same tonic note. So, the parallel minor to F major is F minor.
Start in C major, parallel minor is C minor, relative major is E-flat major, parallel minor is E-flat minor, enharmonic respelling is D-sharp minor (which has 6 sharps).
To find the parallel minor of a major key, you simply need to go down three half steps from the major key. For example, the parallel minor of C major is A minor.
The tonic minor (or parallel minor) of a flat major is a flat minor.
A parallel Major/minor is a major and minor key that has the same letter name. Example: C Major an c minor.
A parallel Major/minor is a major and minor key that has the same letter name. Example: C Major an c minor.
The parallel minor of F-sharp major is F-sharp minor. A parallel minor key is the one with the same tonic note.
The parallel minor is a minor key with the same tonic as a major key, while the relative minor is a minor key with the same key signature as a major key.
A parallel Major/minor is a major and minor key that has the same letter name. Example: C Major an c minor.
G minor
The natural minor scale parallel to G major is E natural minor. This means it has the same key signature (one sharp, F#) as G major, but starts and ends on the note E.