C stands for carbon in chemistry. A small c usually means centi - or 1/100.
Chemistry.
C. B. Hunt has written: 'Organic chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Organic, Organic Chemistry
John C. Bailar has written: 'Chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Chemie
J. C. Mathews has written: 'A modern chemistry course' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Experiments 'Objective tests in modern chemistry' -- subject(s): Problems, exercises, Chemistry
carbon
C. C. Addison has written: 'Use of non-aqueous solvents in inorganic chemistry' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry, Solvents 'Main group elements: groups V and VI' -- subject(s): Inorganic Chemistry
Thomas C. Bruice has written: 'Bioorganic mechanisms' -- subject(s): Bioorganic chemistry, Chemistry, Physical organic, Enzymes, Physical organic Chemistry
chemistry
chemistry
chemistry
William C. McC Lewis has written: 'A system of physical chemistry' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Chemistry, Physical and theoretical, Physical and theoretical Chemistry, Quantum chemistry, Thermodynamics, Quantum theory
Inorganic chemistry does not focus on compounds that contain C-H bonds. Instead, it primarily deals with compounds that do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, such as metallic compounds, minerals, and coordination complexes.