C sharp/D flat
It would be a sharp/flat. Like A would be A#/Bb
This interval is an example of a tone (as opposed to a semitone).
semitone. B to C and E to F are semitones
c flat. the semitone above b flat is b, with is equal to c flat. So the diatonic semitone is c flat because it has to be a different note name.
C sharp/D flat
It would be a sharp/flat. Like A would be A#/Bb
A C flat
All harmonic minor scales have the pattern of tone-semitone-tone-tone-semitone-tone-tone (raised 7th)-semitone. Therefore, D harmonic minor has the notes of D, E, F, G, A, B flat, C# (raised 7th), D.
This interval is an example of a tone (as opposed to a semitone).
Tone and semitone are two words to describe differences in pitch between two notes. A semitone is the difference between F and F#, that is, only a bit. A tone is the difference between F and G, twice as much as a semitone.
It's one half-step, or one semitone.
A diatonic semitone is usually represented by the adjacent letter names. The next higher letter pitch to C is D. The answer is D (natural).
Tone Tone Semitone Tone Tone Tone Semitone, is always the gap between notes in any major scale, which is why most scales need sharps or flats. For example, C major is: C - up a tone - D - up a tone - E - up a semitone - F - up a tone - G - up a tone - A - up a tone - B - up a semitone - C.
semitone. B to C and E to F are semitones
The A harmonic minor scale uses 1 sharp on the seventh degree, that would be a G♯, and you play the G♯ both when ascending and descending. The sequence of tones and semitones in a harmonic minor scale are as follows: Tone Semitone Tone Tone Semitone, Tone-and a half, Semitone. In A minot this is A (up a tone), B (up a semitone), C (up a tone), D (up a tone), E (up a semitone), F (up a tone-and-a-half), G♯ (up a semitone), A.
c flat. the semitone above b flat is b, with is equal to c flat. So the diatonic semitone is c flat because it has to be a different note name.