Next I'm going to talk about another major chord in the G major chord, the minor third chord. The minor third chord and the major third chord are a pair of chords. The difference between the two is that if you add an English letter next to C, M, we call it C minor. If you write C and there's nothing next to it, we call it C major. So now we're going to have a small letter next to every letter we learn, M. For example, C, M, or C minor. Just now we learned C major. The difference between the two is C major. If it's C minor, there's a change in sound. Let's listen again. This is C major. C minor. The difference between the major third and the minor third is the same. There are three notes. C, E, G. When the E drops half a note, it becomes C, G, E, G. At this point, the chord's structure is that the root note and the triad note are minor triads, while the triad note and the pentatonic note are major triads. In other words, the difference between the major third and the triad note is the opposite. C, G, E, G. The major third chord is C, E, G. I'm going to use the distance to show you. This is a little shorter. This is a little bigger. This is the major third. This is the minor third. I'm going to show you a little bit of an image. This is what it looks like in terms of scale distance. Major third. C, E. Minor third. You see, it's one step shorter than the note. So the distance is a little shorter. Because it's a little shorter, the position of the triad note and the pentatonic note is naturally more. If the major third is... So all the minor triads are actually on top of the three fingering of the major third chord just now. One note changes to a minor triad chord. So we can play C, E, G like this. C, E, G becomes C, G, E, G. How do you play this fingering? Let's take a look. This is a C, E, G. The middle finger was the major third chord. The middle finger is here. We don't want to lower it by half a degree. Press it with your index finger. This is the flat pressing of the index finger. It's a little flat. You have to press two strings. You have to press two strings. C, A, C, E. It's called A, C, C. This is the eighth fret of the triad. Then G. This G is on the eighth fret of the second string. So C minor triad becomes C, A, E, G. If it's C major triad, it's C, A, E, G. Listen to the difference. Major triad. Minor triad. There's a difference. The middle finger goes down. Major triad. The middle finger goes up. The index finger has to be pressed flat. Don't do it like this. This is not right. Press two strings like this. This is pressing one string. A, C, E. A, C, E. C, E, G. G, G, G. So all major triads are C, E, G, C, E, G. Minor triads are A, C, E, A, C, E, A, C, E. Then you can sing it. There's another problem. Since major triads have three fingers. Minor triads also have three fingers. C, C, G, G. This is E, G, C, E, down. E, G, E, G, C. This is the second major triad. Look at this. This is E, G, C. Major triad. Minor triad is C. Press this note. It becomes the middle finger. Press E, G. All ten fingers. Minor triad is 12th fret. This hand comes here. Minor triad is 13th fret. This is the second fingering of C minor triad. One, two. The third one. It's too high. Let's lower it. This position. Major triad is G, C, E. Lower E. Lower E. G, C, E. This is the third fingering. C minor triad is one, two, three. Press it again. Middle finger, G. Ring finger, G. Index finger. This is E. Lower E. Okay. One pair. C major triad. C minor triad. C major triad. C minor triad. C major triad. C minor triad. These are the three fingerings of minor triad. Remember them. One, two, three. One, two, three. One, two, three. Major triad is one, two, three. C, C. C. C, M. C, M. Lower M. C, M. Okay. That's all for the three fingerings of minor triad and major triad.