Each Latin name has an element associated with it. Stibium is antimony. Cuprum is copper. Argentum is silver. Natrium is sodium. Ka is not an element and neither is ium. Stannum is tin. Wolfram is tungston and plumbum is lead.
Yes: natrium (Na), aurum (Au), hydragirum (Hg), ferrum (Fe), stannum (Sn), stibium (Sb), plumbum (Pb), argentum (Ag).
The element symbol not matching the name occurs when the symbol is derived from that element's name in Latin or Greek from a name for a compound of that element. Sodium- (Na): Natrium Potassium- (K): Kalium Silver- (Ag): Argentum Tin- (Sn): Stannum Antimony- (Sb): Stibium Tungsten- (W): Wolfram Gold- (Au): Aurum Mercury- (Hg): Hydrargyum Lead- (Pb): Plumbum
Sn standing for Stannum, also lead is Pb because of Plumbum
Eleven elements have names in Latin. Here they are, in ascending atomic number:Sodium (Latin: natrium)Potassium (Latin: kalium)Iron (Latin: ferrum)Copper (Latin: cuprum)Silver (Latin: argentum)Tin (Latin: stannum)Antimony (Latin: stibium)Mercury (Latin: hydragyrum)Gold (Latin: aurum)Lead (Latin: plumbum)Read more: What_elements_have_latin_names
Elements with chemical symbols that don't correspond to their English name include: Iron - Fe - From Latin - Ferrus Silver - Ag - From Latin - Argentum Gold - Au - From Latin - Aurum Tin - Sn - From Latin - Stannum Lead - Pb - From Latin - Plumbum Antimony - Sb - From Latin - Stibium Mercury - Hg - From Latin - Hydrargyrum Potassium - K - From Latin - Kalium Sodium - Na - From Latin - Natrium Tungsten - W - From German - Wolfram Copper - Cu - From Latin - Cuprum
A lot of the elements that have names that seem to have no relation to their chemical symbol are really old elements. This relationship exists because these elements were given names in latin, and the abbreviation sort of stuck Tin(Sn)=Stannum Sodium(Na)=Natrium Potassium(k)=Kalium Iron(Fe)=Ferrum Copper(Cu)=Cuprum Silver(Ag)=Argentum Antimony(Sb)=Stibium Tungsten(W)=Wolfram Gold(Au)=Aurum Mercury(Hg)=Hydrargyrum Lead(Pb)=Plumbum Hope this helped!
stannum = tin
sodium (Na), potassium (K), tungsten (W), iron (Fe), copper (Cu), silver (Ag), gold (Au), mercury (Hg), tin (Sn), lead (Pb), and antimony (Sb)
The Latin for tin is Stannum. SN is the abbreviation for that word.
Sn is the element that derived its symbol from the Latin word stannum. This element has an atomic number of 50.
Group 13 : Aluminium, Gallium, Indium, Thallium Group 14 : Tin(Stannum), Lead(Plumbum) Total : 6 (poor) metals
Tin or Stannum with 10 stable isotopes