sulfur means brimstone or burn stone term was used in the bible
it is a combustion. the word equation would be: sulfur + oxygen → sulfur dioxide the balanced chemical equation: S(s) + O₂(g) → SO₂(g)
Sulfur is derived from the Latin word sulpur, which was Hellenizedto sulphur. The spelling sulfur appears toward the end of the Classical period.
Sulfur is derived from the Latin word sulpur, which was Hellenizedto sulphur. The late Latin form also continues in the Romance languages: French soufre, Italian zolfo (from solfo), Spanish azufre (from açufre, from earlier çufre), Portuguese enxofre (from xofre). The Spanish and Portuguese forms are prefixed with the Arabic article, despite not being Arabic words. The root has been traced back to reconstructed proto-Indo-European *swépl̥ (genitive *sulplós), a nominal derivative of *swelp 'to burn', a lineage also preserved in the Germanic languages, where it is found for example as modern German Schwefel, Dutch zwavel, and Swedish svavel, and as Old Englishswefl.The Latin name for Sulphur was sulfur.
Sulfur was named by using the Latin word for the element, sulphurium. It is spelled 'sulphur' in most English-speaking countries other than the US.Added:sulfur (Sanskrit, गन्धक sulvari; LatinSulphurium)
If you mean Sulphur (s) It's 2.8.6
The closest translation would be "sulfur" since sulphurous isn't an actual word
硫黄 (iou) is the Japanese word for the element, Sulfur.
"Sulfur dioxide" is a phrase, not a word. This phrase is the name of a chemical compound of sulfur and oxygen with a molecular and empirical chemical formula of SO2.
Ironically, sulfur comes from the Latin word Sulfur meaning Brimstone.
You mean Sulfur.......Lieu Huang
Sulfur hexafluoride is the compound SF6.
Sulfur was discovered by Antoine Lavoisier The Latin word for sulfur is sulphur
Sulfur means to....................answer it yourself
it is a combustion. the word equation would be: sulfur + oxygen → sulfur dioxide the balanced chemical equation: S(s) + O₂(g) → SO₂(g)
Sulfur
Old civilizations used to apply sulfur as an insecticide.
"Low-sulfur fuels are essential for the future of the planet"