A question about Guitar Chord Charts?

I was looking for chord charts guitar, and there are these things called bars? As you play these? I know that Major and minor chords are .. but what is a 7):?

A bar, or maybe a bar, is effectively a capo manual. Chord fingerings are a pattern based off of "open strings". You have six strings of a guitar, and you only have four fingers to work (and sometimes they "do not double that. "If you use your index finger to press all six strings, then the remaining three for the standard chords, you will have effectively put a capo on the instrument temporarily. You will find this impossible to do for all the chords you will not have enough fingers. When a chart string indicates a bar, often show an "x" also for strings not to be plucked. As for 7, is an addition to a string, as a 6. The standard pattern for the vast majority of folk songs (traditional, etc. - at least for the most modern) has three chords. The tonic, fourth and fifth. Each is a major chord if you're starting with a greater emphasis (the second, third and sixth are minor, the seventh is lowered). Ooops, I just did confusion. Suppose we are playing in the key of C major. The C chord is the tonic, the chord of F is the fourth, the G chord is the fifth - and you can play a lot of with those things. But often you will see the G note as the G7. This means that to add the seventh note of the scale of G (ie, F) for the chord. The reason that many sometimes appears is because the F is a tone of "leader" in the C chord, which prepares the ear for a C major chord. Try to reproduce the sequence C, F, G, then play C, F, G7. Try them in different orders, you will see that in some cases, you want to "take in" the closure of C with the G7, and sometimes not. The same applies to the smaller keys (one being the relative minor of C, D and E the fourth and fifth). The confusion that I was above the chord seventh "be reduced, I mean the chord based on the seventh note of the scale C, the chord 7 is the addition of the seventh chord, you're playing. Clear as mud?

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