When you draw a circle in math, and you draw a triangle inside of it, 2 of the lines should be the radius of the circle, and the third (bottom) line that is not the radius is the chord.
This describes a chord. A chord is a mathematical term on a part of the circle. A chord uses any 2 points in a circle, not matter if they are away from the diameter line or not, they just have to be inside the circle. If you connect the 2 points you have chosen, it gives you a chord. A chord can look like a line segment. .______. This is a line segment, on the left.
The longest chord of a circle is its diameter
the chord is 4in long
yes
That depends wholly on the instrument with which you play the B chord.
F, A, C, Eb
I'm assuming you mean a half-diminished seventh, since half-diminished triads don't exist. Start with a diminished triad (stacked minor thirds, like C-Eb-Gb or F-Ab-Cb) and add a minor seventh (for the C chord, Bb; for the F chord, Eb).
When you say Eb (E-flat) minor, you're talking about a chord, which in this case is Eb, Gb, Bb and Eb. When you say Eb major, you're talking about a chord with the notes Eb, G, Bb and Eb. You are probably referring to the pitch of the instrument, which is (at least was in my day, Jazz competition 1963 in Texas, age 13), Bb. Call your local music store and they'll be more than happy to inform you.
Hm is the same as the Bm chord.
An Fm7 is made up of an F, an Ab, a C, and an Eb.
Eb
There are two main triad types (chords) that contain a perfect fifth between the root and the fifth: the major chord and the minor chord. The major chord is created by starting with a note (the root), adding a major third on top of that, and adding a minor third on top of that note. A C major chord would look like this: C, E, G (with the E and the G stacked on top of the C). The minor chord is created by starting with a note (again, the root), adding a minor third, and then adding a major third--just the opposite of a major chord. A C minor chord would look like this: C, Eb (E-flat), G.
what does he look like hairy bald caring has blue brown or black eyes
A V-chord is a dominant triad. The route note is on the fifth scale degree (G in the key of C; Eb in the key of Ab; etc.).
It's a chord. It doesn't "look like" anything; it's a sound. If you mean what's the fingering for it, any good guitar chord chart should show that.
It's a chord. It doesn't "look like" anything; it's a sound. If you mean what's the fingering for it, any good guitar chord chart should show that.