It becomes a double sharp. For example, F double sharp is the natural note G.
g sharp would be g sharp or a minor. d sharp would be d sharp or e flat. a sharp would be a sharp or b flat. c sharp would be c sharp or d flat. f sharp would be f sharp or g flat. e sharp would be e sharp or f slat for which there is no such note. and g natural would be g natural.
Open "G" First Finger "A" Second Finger "B" Third Finger "B sharp" Fourth Finger "C"
Normally, a G augmented chord would be G, B, and D-sharp. Augmented mean the top note is raised one half step.
When you sharpen a note, you are making it a semitone higher. And when you flatten a note, you are making it a semitone lower. A natural isn't sharp OR flattened, it is just the note, A B C D E F or G.
It becomes a double sharp. For example, F double sharp is the natural note G.
g sharp would be g sharp or a minor. d sharp would be d sharp or e flat. a sharp would be a sharp or b flat. c sharp would be c sharp or d flat. f sharp would be f sharp or g flat. e sharp would be e sharp or f slat for which there is no such note. and g natural would be g natural.
Open "G" First Finger "A" Second Finger "B" Third Finger "B sharp" Fourth Finger "C"
What cancels an acciental in a Natural sign in front of a note. Example G Major (F#, F sharp). Any note in the line or space of the note F will be affected, but if there is a natural sign it will be restored to its original pitch.
Normally, a G augmented chord would be G, B, and D-sharp. Augmented mean the top note is raised one half step.
C sharp, D sharp, E natural, F sharp, G sharp, A natural, B sharp & C sharp We call the note C "B sharp" to avoid using the same letter name twice. If we used the note name "C" we would have 2 C-notes and no B-notes in the scale!
When you sharpen a note, you are making it a semitone higher. And when you flatten a note, you are making it a semitone lower. A natural isn't sharp OR flattened, it is just the note, A B C D E F or G.
G#
No. On a certain note with both a sharp and flat, (G, for example) they are the same distance from G, but going in diferent directions. G sharp raises the note by one half step while G flat lowers the note by one half step. However, it is possible for a sharp note to mean the same note as a flat note. For example, G sharp is the same note as A flat. This is called being enharmonic.
A double sharp raises a natural note up a tone - so lets take for example F double sharp. F double sharp is one whole tone higher than F which is enharmonically equivalent to G natural.
If the note is on the bar, the sharp (or flat, or natural) goes before the note. If you are just writing the note out, the sharp goes after the note.
A sharp on the piano could be black notes or white ones. A sharp is note that is half a step above the natural note. A natural note is any of the white notes on your piano. For example if you played the G key on your piano you would be playing G natural. If you played the white note on the right of G you would be playing A. If you played the black note on the right of G in between G and A you would be playing G sharp or A flat. Hope that answers your question a sharp is half a step above a note and any of the black notes on the piano are one notes sharp and another notes flat. for example, E sharp would be F natural, a white key.