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The figure 6 indicates the common chord common chord: a basic three-note chord consisting of a root, a third, and a fifth, also known as a triad built from the note a third below the bass original: "base" note.
5/3 A 5/3 chord is a triad in root position. is the chord of the 7th to the 7th; the 3rd of the 5/3 is the common chord to the 5th below?, and the chord 6/5 A 6/5 chord is the first inversion of a seventh chord. is the chord of the 7th to the 5th.
6/4 A 6/4 chord is the second inversion of a triad. is the common chord to the bass note? under? the [note].
4/2 A 4/2 chord is the third inversion of a seventh chord, where the seventh is in the bass. is the chord of the second? below? and is resolved into? the chord.
The 4th is the fourth taken instead of the? 3rd and is resolved? resolved: in music, the movement of a dissonant note to a stable, consonant one into the 3rd. This describes a 4–3 suspension, a common decorative musical device.