Not quite. Since there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, the name would be dihydrogen monoxide.
H2O is water. Also called dihydrogen monoxide. you have 2 hydrogen plus one oxygen.
H20 or water.
You could call it dihydrogen monoxide, or hydrogen hydroxide; both are chemcically correct. Water works just fine though.
Hydrogen times Oxygen
Water is a transparent fluid which forms the world's streams, lakes, oceans and rain, and is the major constituent of the fluids of living things.
Nope, when hydrogen and oxygen are bonded together in the form of water, the technical term is dihydrogen monoxide (H20). Hydrogen monoxide would be HO however, it is not listed as HO, but rather OH (why, I have no idea), which is a base called hydroxide. It all has to deal with the way they bond. Truly, if I were to explain the whole process of how bonding works, I would basically end up writing you a book, because of how much information there is on how different elements bond with one another and why and how they bond in the ways that they do.
Water (H20) contains 2 hydrogen & 1 oxygen that's why its called h20 h2 stands for 2 hydrogen 0 stands for 1 oxygen.
WATER!!!! (H2O) Some 'silly' names for water are:- Dihydrogen monoxide Dihydrogen oxide Hydrogen monoxide Hydrogen oxide. However, in science as everywhere else, water is WATER. These 'silly' names are NEVER used in science.
The symbol "H2O" represents a molecule of water. It consists of two hydrogen atoms (H) bonded to one oxygen atom (O), forming a single molecule of water. This molecular formula is a chemical shorthand used to denote the composition of water, where the subscript numbers indicate the number of atoms of each element present in the molecule.
H20
H20
The chemical name for 'water' is dihydrogen monoxide, commonly called H two O (H20).