Native elements are a group of minerals with a molecular structure consisting of only one element. Some examples are gold, copper and silver.
As elements or as compounds For example, copper occurs in its elemntal form (native copper) and as various compounds (copper sulphide, copper sulphate etc)
What you have listed are not elements (except for the 'native elements'), they are classifications of minerals.
Native elements can be silver or cpper and are made up of one element only.
The number of elements in a compound can be determined by looking at the chemical formula and identifying each element's symbol. For example, the compound CO2 has two elements, carbon and oxygen. Another example, glucose, has the formula C6H12O6, and has three elements, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
It means that you are fluent (can speak) and literate (can read & write) in your own 'native' language (example; Engish) and another (example; Spanish)
Yes, both gold and silver are elements.
Elements can either be synthetic or natural. Synthetic elements are made artificially in laboratories, while natural elements exist in their natural state in nature. Natural elements can further be defined as native elements. These elements exist in their uncombined state.
yes
There are a lot of elements over 100. One example is silicon14, another is curlum96. This link should help:http:/www.bpc.edu/mathscience/chemistry/images/periodic_table_of_elements.jpg
There are just 4 types of elements found in the periodic table, One type is metal, other type is nonmetal , another is metalloid and transition elements. The question is about the example of transition elements. so there are loads of example in the periodic table of transition elements. for example , Radium, Uranium,Thorium , Ytterbium, curium, fermium, plutonium , actinium, terbium, holmium, thulium, lutetium, berkelium , hafnium, tantalum , zirconium, vanadium, scandium, yttrium,etc
Favoring the surrounding or native elements of society over the newer or incoming one. But see Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad for another spin.
Probably the Greek or Latin meanings of the elements came from studying the way the elements behave, or the characteristics the elements possess. For example, helium comes from the Greek 'helios' for 'sun'. Infact, it first was found in the sun. As another example, chlorine comes from the Greek 'chloros', for 'green'. It indeed has a greenish tinge.