Hydrogen monoxide is made of two elements, hydrogen and oxygen.
Carbon and oxygen.
Hydrogen is an element. Water is composed of two elements - Hydrogen and Oxygen. One water molecule has two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. Hence, the alternative name for water- dihydrogen monoxide (DHMO).
The common name for hydrogen monoxide is water.
Hydrogen and fluorine are the two elements that make up hydrogen fluoride (HF).
The common name for hydrogen monoxide is water.
Hydrogen and oxygen. What is probably meant is which two elements make dihydrogen oxide (water; H2O). The answer remains the same: hydrogen and oxygen.
hydrogen and sulphric acid
Hydrogen monoxide is water. Therefore, just about everything to one degree or another.
Hydrogen peroxide contain hydrogen and oxygen.
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen are the only elements that make up sugars.
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.
H2O, Hydrogen oxide, Dihydrogen monoxide, Hydrogen monoxide, Hydroxylic acid, Hydrogen hydroxide, R-718, Oxygen (di-)hydride.... Your Welcome :)