G#
The dominant (fifth) degree of a D sharp major scale is A sharp.
Tonic - G#Supertonic - A#Mediant - B#Sub-dominant - C#Dominant - D#Sub-dominant - E#Leading note - FxTonic - G#
The dominant is the 5th tone in the scale. In a D Major scale, the dominant is A.
No, the A is not the same as B sharp. B sharp would be the C note since there are no music notes between B and C. The C note would only be called a "B sharp" if C sharp is used in a key, since proper music note naming only allows for one note of each base name ("accidental" notes excluded). So rather than have two types of C notes, you would have a type of B note and a type of C note.
The E sharp is the F note. The interval between C sharp and F (e sharp) in two whole steps.
The dominant (fifth) degree of a D sharp major scale is A sharp.
Tonic - G#Supertonic - A#Mediant - B#Sub-dominant - C#Dominant - D#Sub-dominant - E#Leading note - FxTonic - G#
C sharp is equivalent to the note D flat.
G#
The tonic is C sharp.
That would be C-sharp major. Every note is sharp.
C♯
The dominant note is the 5th note in the scale. ie: in a C Major scale, G is the dominant note. The dominant is represented by the Roman Numeral "V" in music.
The dominant is the 5th tone in the scale. In a D Major scale, the dominant is A.
No, the A is not the same as B sharp. B sharp would be the C note since there are no music notes between B and C. The C note would only be called a "B sharp" if C sharp is used in a key, since proper music note naming only allows for one note of each base name ("accidental" notes excluded). So rather than have two types of C notes, you would have a type of B note and a type of C note.
The dominant in a scale is the 5th, which in the key of F# major is C#.
G