Symbols
Rhythm
Major Scales
Minor Scales
Intervals
100

Raise a note by a half step.

Sharp

100

How many beats in a whole note.

Four

100

This Major key signature has no flats or sharps.

C

100

The relative minor to A Major.

F sharp minor

100

The distance between one note to another, weather sounding successively or simultaneously.

Interval

200

This symbol cancels a sharp or flat.

Natural 

200

A horizontal or diagonal line used to connect multiple consecutive notes.

Beam

200

The notes of the the scale are E, F♯, G♯, A, B, C♯, and D♯.

E Major

200

The second note of E minor.

F sharp

200

Intervals that are larger then one octave.

Compound Intervals

300

Shows the end of an interval on a staff.

Double bars

300

The speed or pace of a given piece.

Tempo

300

Fourth note of a C major

F

300

Another name for natural minor.

Aeolian mode

300

Derived from the harmonic series as the interval between the third and fourth harmonics.

Perfect Fourth 

400

Used for lower voices, also know as the F clef.

Bass Clef

400

Slight changes in the tempo, up or down, to make music more expressive.

Rubato

400

This mode is also referred to as the major scale.

Ionian

400

A scale that has the same notes as the natural minor, except the seventh degree is raised by one semitone

The harmonic minor

400

Interval between two notes, in which one of the notes has a pitch that is exactly double the pitch of the other note.

Octave

500

Two or more notes of the same pitch, connected with a curved line, adds the time values together and play as one note

Tie

500

Lengthening a rhythm by doubling the notes values.

Augmentation 

500

Four pitches with the ascending arrangement of W-W-H

Tetrachord

500

Minor scale with raised sixth and seventh scale degrees, but only when ascending

Melodic Minor

500

Intervals one half step smaller of perfect and minor intervals

Diminished Intervals

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