An aluminide is an intermetallic compound of aluminium and a more electropositive element.
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Cation goes first
It is composed of sediments of many worn down rocks, silt, and a combination of chemicals. These chemicals include, but aren't limited to: hydrogen dioxide, iron aluminide, sodium bicarbonate, and many more.
James Dean Cotton has written: 'The influence of chromium on structure and mechanical properties of B2 nickel aluminide alloys' -- subject(s): Nickel-chromium-aluminum alloys, Nickel-aluminum alloys
In naming an ionic compound, the cation is named first, with no modification of the element name, and the anion is named secondly, with the element name modified by the suffix "ide". The incorrect name given in the question applies the proper method for the cation to the anion and vice versa.
As cations, they retain their original names (examples: aluminum chloride, sulfur dioxide). As anions, they get "ide" endings and become aluminide (very rare) and sulfide (not quite as rare). Combined with oxygen in complex anions, they form aluminates, sulfites, sulfates, etc.