There are 2 ounces in a sixteenth of a quart.
Yes, infinitely many.
3/4 = 12/16, so there are twelve sixteenth-inches in three-quarters of an inch.
Sixteenth.
One sixteenth of 100 is 6.25 so 6.25% is one sixteenth of 100.
2!
sixteenth rest, quarter rest, half rest, whole rest
sixteenth rest, quarter rest, half rest, whole rest
Whole, half, quarter, eighth, sixteenth... You can have a rest for every value of note.
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
Two sixteenth rests equal one eighth rest
The clue is in the name of the note. The sixteenth (or semiquaver) is one-sixteenth of a whole note (or semibreve). Look at the time signature of your piece of music: a semiquaver rest will occupy exactly the same number of beats as a semiquaver note. For example, if your piece is in 4/4 time, it will occupy a quarter of a beat.
Whole/Dotted whole note/rest, Half/Dotted Half note/rest, Quarter/Dotted Quarter note/rest, Eighth/Dotted Eighth note/rest, Sixteenth/Dotted Sixteenth note/rest. These are the most common note values. They do go on though. All you have to do is multiply each number by two. For example: the next note/rest value after sixteenth is Thirty-second/Dotted Thirty-second. Then sixty-fourth; and so on.
8 a dotted sixteenth is equal to rest/note is equal to 3/8 of a beat in 4/4 time signature. a dotted half is equal to 3 beats or 24/8 of a beat. so 24/3=8
That depends on the time signature. In common time, or 4/4 time, which is the most common time signature, a sixteenth rest will last for one quarter of a beat.
2 sixteenth note
6 sixteenth notes