Want this question answered?
If this really is a compound, it is named "magnesium bromide hydroxide".
magnesium chloride
No it is a covalent compound named Rosuvastatin
If the compound contains a polyatomic ion, simply name the ion.
When the compound produces hydrogen atoms, (H+) in the solution, it is called an acid.
If this really is a compound, it is named "magnesium bromide hydroxide".
There is a compound that could be called carbon trihydride hydroxide, but it is never called that. Instead it is called methanol, or sometimes methyl alchohol.
Fe(OH)2 is named iron(II) hydroxide. It can also be named ferrous hydroxide.
'OH^-' ions are named as 'Hydroxides'. e.g. Potassium hydroxide KOH. Calcium hydroxide 'Ca(OH)2'. NB The hydroxide ion is ALWAYS written as 'OH'. Never' 'HO'. NNB Being a negatively charged ion it correctly named as an 'ANION'.
The OH^- anion is referred to as hydoxyl, hydroxide, hydroxy, etc.
Yes: The characteristic named is part of the definition of a compound.
In Swift there are two kinds of type: named and compound. A named type is simply a type that is given a name when it is defined. All the built-in (primitive) data types are named types but you can define your own. A compound type is simply a type without a name and can either be a function or a tuple. Compound types may include both named types and other compound types: (Int (Int, Int)) defines a tuple containing a named type, Int, and another compound type (Int, Int) containing two named types, Int and Int.
magnesium chloride
nitrogen trifluoride
No it is a covalent compound named Rosuvastatin
All bases have hydroxide ions in solution. They are named as OH- ions.
Fe(ClO4)3 is an ionic compound named Iron III Perchlorate.