

Chamberlin Locke then locked it along with the Music Box along with several other keys in the Vault of Shadows to prevent John Locke from using it to turn the tides of World War I. A few hours later, Fiona, though slightly dazed by the key's effects, used the Music Box Key to make birds hang up the laundry and raccoons to sweep and mop the walkways around Keyhouse. In 1915, John invokes a secret command of the key on Fiona Locke and gives her subconscious instructions. In German, Dutch, and Lithuanian, the minor key signatures are written with a lower case letter ( d-Moll, d klein, d kleine terts).In 1851, Harland used the Music Box key in Hammersmith's final moments to make him tell Harland and his brothers where Delacotre was. In the German notation scheme, a hyphen is added between the pitch and the alteration ( D-Dur). Note that the 'major' alteration is usually superfluous, as a key description missing an alteration is invariably assumed to be major. To form a key designation, locate the note name in the pitch translation table and add the major/minor qualifier from the lower table as needed. This article is concerned with written usage. Similarly, a Dutch musician may refer to a written F ♯ orally as Fis. For example, recent French scores or books may use the English system (this is especially common for chord symbols), but French users would read out that notation according to the Fixed Do system.

Another tendency has been to use the English system in writing but to read it out according to either the Fixed Do or the German system if those are the systems used locally. The only case where this can lead to some confusion is when the letter B is used because it would not be clear whether the intention was for it to be understood as B ♮ (English system) or B ♭ (German system). There has been a tendency in some countries that historically used the Fixed Do key notation or the German key notation to switch to the English system, especially among musicians working in popular music genres or jazz. This is especially common in the Netherlands. However, in some places where the German system is in use one may encounter the use of B for B ♮ and Bes for B ♭. The German key notation differs from the English system in two respects, namely that B ♮ is referred to by the letter H and B ♭ by the letter B by itself, and that sharp and flat designations do not use words but suffix is for sharps and suffix es (reduced to s if the tone letter is a vowel) for flats, except that (as already mentioned) in the German system the letter B by itself already means B flat. German key notation – used (among others) in German, Dutch (in the Netherlands, where it is used along with the English system), Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Finnish, Estonian, Serbian (along with the English system), Croatian, Bosnian, Slovene, Hungarian, Polish, Czech and Slovak.Instead of the letters C, D, E, F, G, A, B, seven syllables (derived from solfege) are used to refer to the seven diatonic tones of C major: Do (in French Do or Ut), Re, Mi, Fa, Sol (never So), La, Si (never Ti), with some variations and adaptations according to country, language and alphabet, followed by the accidental ( natural is clearly most often omitted) and then the major/minor qualifier as needed. Serbia) where Fixed Do solmization is used also use the Fixed Do key notation. Fixed Do key notation – used (among others) in Italian, French, Dutch (in the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium), Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Occitan, Breton, Basque, Russian (along with the German system), Ukrainian, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Latvian, Lithuanian (along with the German and English system), Romanian, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, Persian, Turkish (along with the English system) and Vietnamese.Two notation systems are most commonly found beside the English system, the Fixed Do key notation and the German key notation When a musical key or key signature is referred to in a language other than English, that language may use the usual notation used in English (namely the letters A to G, along with translations of the words sharp, flat, major and minor in that language): languages which use the English system include Irish, Welsh, Hindi, Japanese (based on katakana in iroha order), Korean (based on hangul in ganada order), Chinese, Thai, Indonesian, Filipino, Swahili, Esperanto.
