A compound can only be changed by a chemical reaction.
The non-metal suffix is changed to "ide" when a compound is formed. This indicates that the non-metal is in its elemental form and has gained electrons to form an anion in the compound.
Subscripts in chemical formulas cannot be changed because they represent the number of atoms of each element present in the compound and are based on the compound's chemical structure. Changing subscripts would alter the formula and therefore the identity of the compound.
Yes, the element changes to compound when atoms of it changes because compound is made up of different types of element and the element is made up of different types of atoms when the atoms are changed the element also changes and different types of elements are made due to this the element is changed to a compound.
Yes, it is converted from an element to form a compound, since it will only from an ion by finding some other species that will accept the donor electron.
The ending of the second element in a compound is typically changed to "-ide". For example, in sodium chloride, the second element chlorine becomes chloride.
Compound adjectives are only compound before the noun.
-ide
It is a mixture. A element contains only one of the elements from the periodic table and a mixture is something with more then one element but unlike a compound the components are not chemically bonded to one another it can be changed or filtered back to its original state.
Ballet only changed in the way they dressed so that's the only thing that changed
The name of the compound CBr4 is Carbon Tetrabromide. The ending of the second element is changed from 'ine' to 'ide'. Since this is a covalent compound of two nonmetals, the 4 is used on the bromide.
In making a mixture there has been no change in the chemical bonds, in making a compound the chemical bonds are changed.
It's a compound. Only two things are mixed to make it.