Bass guitar strings are tuned to the same notes as the thickest four strings of an electric guitar, but they are tuned one octave lower. So, the same notes, but one octave "deeper".
No, the strings of a guitar are tuned in fourths (read: E to A = 4 notes, A to D = 4 notes, etc.), until you get to "that darned B string". For every string on a guitar to be tuned in even fourths, the tuning would have to be as follows: EADGCF.
it depends you can tune it to lots off different ones
i think many are the same and tuned but some lower notes are thicker so they can go lower and higher ones are thinner and then just tunned to secific notes
It vibrates to the pitch it is tuned to.
By tightening or loosening the strings with keys.
The number of possible notes and chords is provided by multiple tuned strings, along with multiple frets (string stops) on the long neck. The strings can be played separately or together.
The four strings on the viola are C, G, D, and A, starting from the lowest to the highest strings. The viola is tuned one fifth below the violin.
They can be tuned anyway you wish. The most common tuning today is G'CEA, where the C is the lowest note.
In standard tuning, the thinnest string (referred to as #1) is tuned to E. Moving up, the 2nd string is tuned to B; 3rd string is tuned to G; 4th string is tuned to D; 5th string is tuned to A; and the 6th string (thickest string) is tuned to E.
From thin to thick it goes EBGDAE and a way to remember it would be Easter Bunnies Go Dancing At Easter
The thickest string will have the lowest pitch. As the strings grow thinner the pitch will become higher.