5 lines and 4 spaces used to define a specific set of pitches.
Staff
These indicate a specific duration of silence during a measure.
Rests
The highness and lowness of a sound.
Pitch
This major scale in bass clef has no flats or sharps.
C major
This minor scale has no flats or sharps.
A minor
This signifies the end of a section or movement.
Double bar line
This is upwards when you are below the middle line, and downwards when you are above the middle line.
Stem
Three or more pitches sounding simultaneously.
Chord
There are how many sharps in the F# major scale?
6
The B flat minor scale has this many flat notes.
5
A sign that indicates the section should be played again.
Repeat sign
This type of note has half the value of the note added to it.
Dotted note
Italian word from the English dynamic which means very soft.
Pianissimo
This major scale consists of one flat key.
F major
This minor scale has seven sharps.
A sharp
There are four of these, assigning a specific pitch range to a line on a staff.
Clefs
Not to be confused with an urban hairstyle, this is also known as a quarter note.
Crochet
This Italian word from the English dynamic which means getting softer.
Decrescendo
The sequence of these between the notes of a major scale are TTSTTTS.
Intervals
This scale always begins on the 6th degree of the major scale.
Relative minor
This rhythm involves dividing a beat into an equal number of subdivisions permitted by a time signature.
Tuplets
A sixteenth note, also known as this, is 1/4 of a beat.
Semiquaver
A set of three stacked notes that produce a chord.
Triad
Intervals smaller than a semitone are known as these.
Microtones
This musical mode is also known as the natural minor scale.
Aeolian mode