That answer is a bit confusing if you don’t have solfège background. Essentially it’s trying to tell you that B, B♭, and B♯ all refer to the same scale degree, differing only in color. In fixed-do, you’d call it si, and in moveable-do, you’d call it ti or te depending on whether it’s flat. (Solfège mostly ignores B♯ and C♭.)

Eventually, the European seven-note musical structure—do, re, mi, fa, sol, la, ti—or the "do re mi" method of reading music and singing, became standard. The four note shapes were expanded into seven geometric characters, and notes were later printed on a staff of lines, as in the European method.

This is a super fun (yet truly educational!) game where students race to the finish line by naming solfege notes! Options include moveable Do starting in a variety of places, fixed Do, and Curwen hand signs! Use in your daily lessons, as part of center activities, or as a great sub plan! This is the Solfege version – Do Re Mi Fa Sol La Ti Do
Do Di Re Ri Mi Fa Fi Sol Si La Li Ti Do & Do Ti Te La Le Sol Se Fa Mi Me Re ("rah") Ra Do w #w w #w w w #w w #w w #w w w w w bw w bw w bw w nw bw w bw w & # 1 Sol Moveable do: Do Fixed do: G major scale: 2 La Re (or Si) 3 Ti Mi 4 Do Fa 5 Re Sol 6 Mi La 7 Fa Ti Sol Do w w w w w w w w Standard syllables Chromatic syllables Fixed do versus moveable do
Apr 11, 2018 ¡ do (or ut), re, mi, fa, so (or sol), la, si (or ti). A Greek reader, Christos Kontas, informs us that the Greek pitch naming system, which follows the Italian convention, is also based on the solfeggio. References: personal communication from Christos Kontas on the naming of notes in Greece
Jan 5, 2021 ¡ Natural minor: do re me fa sol le te do; Harmonic minor: do re me fa sol le ti do; Melodic minor, ascending: do re me fa sol la ti do; Melodic minor, descending: do te le sol fa me re do; The chromatic scale, which goes up only in half steps, includes some syllables that are rarely used in songs.
a8JF. 61 46 185 467 483 338 469 172 9

do re mi fa sol la ti do music notes