The word aes (aeris, n.) referred to any sort of crude metal dug out of the ground except gold and silver (it is from the same ultimate source as the English word "ore"). It was often used by itself to mean "copper". A more specific term for copper was Cyprium aes, the metal from Cyprus, which evolved into cuprum, and at length into the English word "copper".
Cuprum but also Cupremianticia and Cupremnictiyermumtica
The scientific name is CU whichstands for Copper United or Cuprum
1.in border ,on edge [din]
2.big place as one state [tin]
The origin of the word Copper is Latin for Cuprum: From the isle of Cyprus, which is famed for it's Copper mines.
From the Latin word 'Cupric' - hence the symbol Cu.
From the Latin word cuprum, which means "from the island of Cyprus."From the Latin word cyprium, after the island of Cyprus
Cu is used for copper as it is an abbreviation of the Latin word for copper, which is Cuprum.
Cu from "cupro", the Latin word for copper.
Cu comes from the Latin word cuprus, which mean copper.
"ferrum" is the Latin word for iron.
From the Latin word cyprium, after the island of Cyprus
Cu, which is derived from the Latin word for copper, cuprum.
From the Latin word cyprium, after the island of Cyprus, by the ancient Romans, because so much of it was mined there.'Copper' is a corruption from the Latin 'aes Cyprium', "the metal of Cyprus", Cyprus having been an important source of copper for the Romans.
Copper, that wonderful metal we use for electrical wire and piping, was known to ancients. Its use dates back thousands of years. It was called cuprum back in the day, which is Latin. And that Latin name is the source of its chemical symbol, Cu.
Cuprum is the Latin word for "Copper", this chemical element has the atomic number 29 and the symbol Cu.