Major Triads
Minor Triads
Diminished / Augmented Triads
Seventh Chords
Chord Identification & Construction
100

The name of the notes in a C major triad and tell its interval structure (root → third → fifth) using major/minor intervals.

What is C–E–G; intervals: major third (C→E), perfect fifth (C→G)?

100

Name the notes in an A minor triad and state its interval structure (root → third → fifth).

A–C–E; intervals: minor third (A→C), perfect fifth (A→E).

100

Define a diminished triad and give an example on B (name the notes).

Diminished triad = root, minor third, diminished fifth. B diminished: B–D–F.

100

Define a dominant 7th chord and give the notes in G7.

G7: G–B–D–F (root, major third, perfect fifth, minor seventh).

100

On the note list D–F#–A, identify the triad and its quality.

D–F#–A = D major.

200

Build a G major triad  and indicate the quality of the third.

G–B–D; third is major (G→B M3, B-D m3).

200

Show how to get a minor triad from a major triad by altering one note; give an example starting with C major.

Lower the third of the major triad by a half step. C major C–E–G → C minor C–E♭–G.

200

Define an augmented triad and provide the notes for C augmented.

C augmented: C–E–G# (root, major third, augmented fifth).

200

What notes make a half-diminished 7th chord built on B (Bø7)? Spell them and name the intervals from the root.

Bø7 (B half-diminished 7): B–D–F–A (diminished triad + minor seventh).

200

Given the notes Eb–G–Bb, name the triad and state whether it is major/minor/augmented/diminished.

Eb–G–Bb = E♭ major.

300

Explain how to build a major triad from any root using scale degrees (which degrees of the major scale form the triad?) and give an example starting on A.

Use scale degrees 1, 3, 5 of major scale. Example A major triad: A–C#–E.

300

Given the notes B–D–F#, identify the chord and explain your reasoning.

B–D–F# is B minor (B–D is minor third, B–F# is perfect fifth)

300

Given the notes G–Bb–Db, identify the triad quality and explain your reasoning (intervals above the root).

G–Bb–Db is G diminished (G→Bb minor third; G→Db diminished fifth).

300

Explain the difference between a fully diminished 7th chord and a half-diminished 7th chord in terms of triad quality and the seventh interval; give an example of each.

Fully diminished 7th: diminished triad + diminished seventh (e.g., B°7: B–D–F–A♭); half-diminished: diminished triad + minor seventh (B–D–F–A).

300

If you see the notes A–C–Eb–G, identify the seventh chord.

A–C–Eb–G = A half-diminished seventh

400

Given the notes E–G#–B, identify the triad, its inversion possibilities.

E–G#–B; inversions: root (E–G#–B), 1st (G#–B–E), 2nd (B–E–G#).

400

Construct a minor triad on F# (spell with correct accidentals) and state the intervals that make it minor.

F#-A-C# (F#-A=m3, A-C#=M3)
400

Construct a fully diminished triad on E (spell the notes correctly) and state its interval pattern.

E diminished triad: E–G–Bb.

400

Construct and spell an F# dominant 7th chord. List the chord tones and label the interval quality of each (major/minor/diminished).

F#7: F#–A#–C#–E (A# is major third, C# perfect fifth, E minor seventh).

400

Construct and spell a fully diminished 7th chord on C#.

C#°7 spelled: C#–E–G–B♭

500

Construct a major triad on the note D#. State the intervals from the root and why this triad is major.

D#–Fx–A# — root to third: major third; root to fifth: perfect fifth.

500

Compare the sound/quality differences between a minor triad and a major triad, and explain what causes the difference in terms of intervals.

Minor triad sounds darker/less bright because it has a minor third (3 semitones) instead of a major third (4 semitones).

500

Explain the difference in interval construction between Major/Minor Triads vs. Diminished/Augmented Triads.

Major/Minor Triads alternate M3 and m3 (eg. Major Triad=M3-m3). Diminished/Augmented Triads have similar thirds (eg. Diminished Triad= m3-m3).

500

Given the four notes C–E–G–Bb, identify the chord (type and root).

C-E-G-Bb = C dominant7

500

Given the notes F–A–C–E, identify the chord (type and root).

F–A–C#–E = F Maj7.

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