Tenor clef does of course exist, and can be used by bassoon.
Soprano is middle c to g, alto is treble clef under the staff g to d, tenor is c to high g ( bass clef) and bass which is bass clef f to c
Several instruments make use of both bass and tenor clefs. The most common ones I can think of presently are the cello and the bassoon. Much of the time, music is written in bass clef, but can change when the passage to be played moves up to a higher register where tenor clef would be appropriate.
Treble
Yes, tenor clef is a C clef, in that it indicates the position of middle C, which in this case is on the 4th line from the bottom.
The tenor clef is used by violas.
Tenor clef does of course exist, and can be used by bassoon.
Soprano is middle c to g, alto is treble clef under the staff g to d, tenor is c to high g ( bass clef) and bass which is bass clef f to c
Several instruments make use of both bass and tenor clefs. The most common ones I can think of presently are the cello and the bassoon. Much of the time, music is written in bass clef, but can change when the passage to be played moves up to a higher register where tenor clef would be appropriate.
Treble
Yes, tenor clef is a C clef, in that it indicates the position of middle C, which in this case is on the 4th line from the bottom.
Bass clef is also called F clef , because the clef sign starts on 4th line called F note, this note should be played 5notes below the middle C. Treble clef is called G clef, because the clef sign starts on 2nd line called G note. This note should be played 5 notes above the middle C. Simple answer: The bass clef is below the treble clef so the sound is lower.
Bass and also tenor clef.
Is it a tenor clef? A tenor clef looks like that.
Yes
it is the bass clef
It's a movable clef that can theoretically be positioned anywhere, but alto and tenor clefs are the two primary uses of it.