Diatonic semitone: Difference between revisions
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Cmloegcmluin (talk | contribs) disambiguation page for diatonic semitone, modeled after https://en.xen.wiki/w/Chromatic_semitone Tag: Removed redirect |
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See | In scale theory, the '''diatonic semitone''', the '''minor second''' or the '''limma''' is the small step of the [[diatonic]] scale. | ||
In [[just intonation]], an interval may be classified as a diatonic semitone if it is reasonably mapped to [[7edo|1\7]] and [[12edo|1\12]] (precisely one step of the diatonic scale and one step of the chromatic scale). | |||
== See also == | |||
* [[256/243|256/243, the Pythagorean diatonic semitone]] (3-limit) | * [[256/243|256/243, the Pythagorean diatonic semitone]] (3-limit) | ||
* [[16/15|16/15, the classic diatonic semitone]] (5-limit) | * [[16/15|16/15, the classic diatonic semitone]] (5-limit) | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Terms]] | ||
[[Category:Diatonic]] |
Revision as of 10:24, 12 January 2023
In scale theory, the diatonic semitone, the minor second or the limma is the small step of the diatonic scale.
In just intonation, an interval may be classified as a diatonic semitone if it is reasonably mapped to 1\7 and 1\12 (precisely one step of the diatonic scale and one step of the chromatic scale).
See also
- 256/243, the Pythagorean diatonic semitone (3-limit)
- 16/15, the classic diatonic semitone (5-limit)