A sixteenth note is half the duration of an eighth note, so there are two 1/16th note in one 1/8th note.
Six. One eighth note = two sixteenth notes, because a 1/16 note is half the duration of an 1/8 note. So, 3 eighth notes (x2) is six sixteenth notes.
6 sixteen-3 eighth notes
48
two
12
4
2
Two
If after means shorter length, then that would be a sixteenth note. Two sixteenth notes equal an eighth note.
Two sixteenth notes take up the same amount of time/space as one eighth note.
it equals a quarter note because 2 sixteenth notes equal an eight note so 4 sixteenth notes would equal a quarter note.
Those two notes equal a dotted eighth note. In terms of beats, (assuming common time) then the eighth note gets a half a beat and the sixteenth note gets a quarter of a beat, so the two of them together get 3/4 of a beat.
3
3
Two
If after means shorter length, then that would be a sixteenth note. Two sixteenth notes equal an eighth note.
Two sixteenth notes take up the same amount of time/space as one eighth note.
it equals a quarter note because 2 sixteenth notes equal an eight note so 4 sixteenth notes would equal a quarter note.
Those two notes equal a dotted eighth note. In terms of beats, (assuming common time) then the eighth note gets a half a beat and the sixteenth note gets a quarter of a beat, so the two of them together get 3/4 of a beat.
A dotted eighth note is equal in duration to three sixteenth notes.
Oh, this can be so tricky, depending on the meter of the piece in question and how complex the passage is. The quick and dirty answer is that a dotted eighth has the value of three sixteenth notes. You can see that two eighth notes would be equal to 4 sixteenth notes, right? If you pair a dotted eighth note with a sixteenth note (you will see this very often: the two notes are connected with one flag/bar, the dot comes with the first note, and there is an added flag/bar segment to the second note that is short; it doesn't extend back to the first note) then the dotted eighth takes the place of the first 3 sixteenth notes in a group of four sixteenths.
Sixteenth notes are these to the left. They are played 2x the speed that eighth notes are played.
whole note,half note, quarter note,eighth note,sixteenth note, and 32note
Oh, this can be so tricky, depending on the meter of the piece in question and how complex the passage is. The quick and dirty answer is that a dotted eighth has the value of three sixteenth notes. You can see that two eighth notes would be equal to 4 sixteenth notes, right? If you pair a dotted eighth note with a sixteenth note (you will see this very often: the two notes are connected with one flag/bar, the dot comes with the first note, and there is an added flag/bar segment to the second note that is short; it doesn't extend back to the first note) then the dotted eighth takes the place of the first 3 sixteenth notes in a group of four sixteenths.