Iridium
The name "rainbow" comes from the Latin word "radius" which means "ray" or "beam of light." Rainbows are formed when sunlight shines through rain droplets in the atmosphere, refracting or bending the light and creating a spectrum of colors.
The Rainbow Lorikeet's scientific name is trichoglossus haematodus. Haematodus comes from the Latin haemameaning 'blood'. It is a reference to the bird's brilliant colours.
The abbreviation comes from the latin term ferrum.
The name "copper" comes from the Latin word "cuprum," which was derived from the island of Cyprus where copper was mined extensively in ancient times. The chemical symbol for copper, Cu, also reflects its Latin name.
A patronymic name meaning "son of Gonzalo." The given name "Gonzalo" comes from the medieval name Gundisalvus, which was the Latin form of a Germanic name composed of the elements "gund," meaning "war" and "salv" which is of unknown meaning. A patronymic name meaning "son of Gonzalo." The given name "Gonzalo" comes from the medieval name Gundisalvus, which was the Latin form of a Germanic name composed of the elements "gund," meaning "war" and "salv" which is of unknown meaning.
The element whose name comes from the Latin word for earth, "terra," is "terbium." Terbium is a rare earth element with the symbol Tb and atomic number 65. It is used in various applications, including electronics and phosphors for lighting.
The atomic symbol Mn for the element manganese comes from its Latin name "Manganum." The symbol Mn was derived from this Latin name and was assigned to identify manganese in the periodic table of elements.
The symbols for elements are derived from their names in various ways. In the case of iron, its symbol "Fe" comes from the Latin word "ferrum." Over time and through historical conventions, these symbols have become standardized even if they may not seem directly related to the element's name at first glance.
Fe comes from FERRUM, which is latin name for iron. All names of chemical elements are given in Latin (or Greek) in Mendeleev's Periodical Table.
The symbol for each element needs to have a different letter, or letters, to distinguish it from others. A single letter (in the Latin alphabet) is only enough for 26 different elements, and 118 elements are known so far, so two-letter codes are required for most elements. If you mean, different to the element's name, that is (a) due to the requirement of having unique codes, and (b) because Latin names for some elements are different to the English names. For example, the Latin name for gold is aurum, so the symbol "Au" was chosen for gold.
some of the symbols for elements in the periodic table differ from their names as their syymbols are base on their latin names, for instance, sodium, symbol Na comes from natrium the latin name, same for other elements such as lead (plumbum) and tin (selenium) and so on
It comes from the Latin word ferrum. Iron is the common English name. Elements are usually named in the language of the country they were discovered in. The elements known since ancient times are mostly given Latin names. Eg: Na=sodium=natrium