square root of c to the second power is c
The cube root is 4.
The mediant of c minor will be the note b#.
This question is unclear.You could be asking for the square root of ( c5 )or alternatively for ( the square root of c )5Also are you intending for c to be as in the speed of light - if not, why not use x?
C, E and G.
The root note on a guitar is the same thing as the root note on any other instrument. If you are playing a C chord, C is the root. With a G chord, G is the root, and so on.
The term, "root" in Musical terms means the note that the rest of a chord is based around. For example, a C major chord which consists of the notes C, E and G would have a root note of C as it the note that allows the rest of a chord to follow. It is always the first note of any chord.
That is called the "base" of the chord. Try not to get this word confused with "root," which is the lowest note of the chord if it is in root position. Root position is when the chord is built up in thirds. Ex: C, E and G make up the C chord and the root of the chord "C" is also the base note. If this same C chord is mixed around so that G is the lowest note then higher in order is C and then E, then G would be the base note of the chord.
It means the root of the chord is the lowest note being played. If it's a C-major chord, the C is on the bottom.
A basic chord, a triad, is made up of the root note, the third, and the fifth. The root note is the naming note for the chord. For example, the C major chords root is C. Then the third of that chord would be three notes up to E starting with C(C - D- E). The fifth is the G, which is five notes up from C (C-D-E-F-G). Any chords that are formed naturally by the notes of the key that it is in, are called diatonic chords. C major is a diatonic chord in the key of C.
On keyboard you can play a chord using just the root, third and fifth. For the "C" chord, this is C E G. This is root position. The other chords would be first inversion, and the second inversion. You simply move the "root" note, or C so that it's the third note instead of the first, or E G C. The second inversion is G C E. You can achieve totally different sounds by changing the root, and also, when you change chords, it can be easier, and add a different effect.
It's C#. The "leading note" is always 1/2 step before the root note.
A major chord consists of the root (tonic) note, the third scale degree (mediant) and the fifth note (dominant). In the key of C major - without sharps and flats - the C major chord consists of the notes C, E and G.
A trinomial of the form ax2 + bx + c , where a is a square, c is a square and b = 2(sq root a)(sq root b). b can be a negative also. ex: x2 + 6x + 9 , note a = 1 or 16x2 - 40x + 25
The arpeggio is the root, 3rd, and 5th of the scale. In F major, those note are F A C.
There is no such thing as a C sharp minor on a piano. C sharp minor refers to a key signature or tonal center, not a singular note. Remember, the individual notes in music mean nothing until they are made relative to each other by the scale or chords used. Right but also the C# minor scale (C#m) means take the C# scale and flat the third note in the scale progression. The third note here is E# (E Sharp). Start by counting the first note of the scale, it is called the root, in this case C#. So, C#, D#, then E#. The chord is the usually the first (root), 3rd and fifth notes of the scale progression. In a minor key/scale you flat the 3rd note of the scale/chord. So here the E# is flatted to be natural E. The chord C# minor (C#m) consists of the notes C#, E and G#. Have fun.
square root of c to the second power is c