It is the Treble Clef, which I am sure was a typo. The lines from top to bottom follow the pattern of e, g, b, d, f. So the second line is g.
aka the "C" clef ... the middle line is the note "C".
The other designation for the bass clef is the 'F' clef.
It indicates the position of G
"G" Clef. It's called this because the little curly thing wraps around the G line on the music staff.
The proper name for the treble clef in music is the G clef, because the clef is a kind of medieval way of writing the letter G. You can see the simililarities in the shape of the clef to the shape of the upper-case (G) and lower-case (g) letters. The curved shape of the clef wraps around the second line from the bottom of the stave as though it is saying something about this line. It is actually saying that any note on this line is a G. Similarly, the "bass" clef is more properly known as the F clef because it is, again, an old-fashioned way of writing the letter F. The two dots above and below the second line from the top of the stave is saying something about this line, namely, that a note written on this line is an F.
The Bass Clef
aka the "C" clef ... the middle line is the note "C".
The other designation for the bass clef is the 'F' clef.
G clef is another name for the treble clef (it circles the G line on the staff). It represents a higher range than the bass clef.
It indicates the position of G
"G" Clef. It's called this because the little curly thing wraps around the G line on the music staff.
The proper name for the treble clef in music is the G clef, because the clef is a kind of medieval way of writing the letter G. You can see the simililarities in the shape of the clef to the shape of the upper-case (G) and lower-case (g) letters. The curved shape of the clef wraps around the second line from the bottom of the stave as though it is saying something about this line. It is actually saying that any note on this line is a G. Similarly, the "bass" clef is more properly known as the F clef because it is, again, an old-fashioned way of writing the letter F. The two dots above and below the second line from the top of the stave is saying something about this line, namely, that a note written on this line is an F.
Middle C, which is one ledger line below the treble staff, and one ledger line above the bass staff.
the treble clef :)
You start with middle C, then you go to B, and then A is the first line. G is next, then F, E, D, C, B, and A. It's just saying your alphabet backward starting with C, until you get to A, and then you start with G from then on.
The simplest answer is, read it down a third. In treble cleff, G is one line up from the bottom line. In bass clef, G is the bottom line. However, note that the bass cleff note would be an octave lower than its treble clef counterpart. But then, you have the added problem of transposing keys. For instance, B-flat trumpet music is written in a different key than tenor trombone or piano music. If the trombone part is in b-flat, the trumpet part will be in C, so depending on what music you are transposing, you may or may not have to change the key.
Treble Clef