A 4 on the bottom indicates that a quarter note gets one beat.
The bottom number in a time signature is the denominator of the fraction denoting the note value that gets the beat. So if the bottom number in the time signature is a four, imagine it's the bottom of a fraction with a numerator of 1. 1/4 is a quarter, so the quarter note gets the beat.
The bottom number indicates what duration of note gets the beat.
It means that each measure contains three beats.
The bottom number in a time signature is the denominator of the fraction denoting the note value that gets the beat. So if the bottom number in the time signature is a four, imagine it's the bottom of a fraction with a numerator of 1. 1/4 is a quarter, so the quarter note gets the beat.
The top number indicates the number of beats per measure, and the bottom number indicates what note value gets one beat.
Depending on the meter of the phrase, a whole note contains how the number of beats equal to the bottom number in the time signature.
A 4 at the top of a time signature indicates that there are 4 beats in the bar of what ever the bottom number is in the time signature. For example in 4/4 times there is 4 quarter note beats. In 4/8 there is 4 eighth note beats.
The bottom number in a time signature is the denominator of the fraction denoting the note value that gets the beat. So if the bottom number in the time signature is a four, imagine it's the bottom of a fraction with a numerator of 1. 1/4 is a quarter, so the quarter note gets the beat.
it gets 6/8 beats
The bottom number in a time signature is the denominator of the fraction denoting the note value that gets the beat. So if the bottom number in the time signature is a four, imagine it's the bottom of a fraction with a numerator of 1. 1/4 is a quarter, so the quarter note gets the beat.
quarter note
two
It depends on the time signature. If the bottom number is a 2, then it is ⅜ of a beat. If the bottom number is a 4, then it is ¾ of a beat. If the bottom number is an 8, then it is 1½ beats.
The bottom number indicates what duration of note gets the beat.
I don't believe there is such a thing as a time signature with only one number!
The bottom number indicates what note value gets one beat.
The bottom figure of the time signature determines the duration of a beat. When the bottom number is 4 (2/4, 3/4 etc.), a quarter note takes a beat. If the bottom number is 2 (2/2, 3/2 etc.), the duration of a beat is a half note.