Wolfram is what tungsten used to be called,
which is why W is its chemical symbol.
Wolfram is the german word, the latin word is not verified
Carbon (C) and wolfram (W) - (or tungsten in some countries).
wolfran
Wolfram
The Latin Name of Mercury is Hydrargyrum that is why it's symbol is Hg.
Potassium has a chemical symbol that is derived from a Latin name.
Not all element symbols come from English words. Iron is one example. Fe comes from the Latin word for iron: ferrum. In chemistry 'ferric' indicates the trivalent ion, Fe3+ and 'ferrous' indicates the divalent ion, Fe2+. Ferric oxide or Iron(III) oxide is rust, Fe2O3. There are other examples including: Tungsten, W for wolfram; Sodium, Na for natrium; Potassium, K for kalium.
What is more efficient a tungsten light or an incandescent light?
Sn is the symbol for tin. (from Latin: stannum)
the latin word for tungsten is Wolfram
Wolfram
W means Tungsten [Wolfram in German].
Tungsten -W.
Tungsten is called "Wolfram" in German, and the "W" symbol comes from the German name of the element. wolframium is the latin term
Tungsten is called "Wolfram" in German, and the "W" symbol comes from the German name of the element. wolframium is the latin term
In Spanish and German, Tungsten is known as "wolfram", and can be found in wolframite ore. This name came from the original name, "Volf Rahm", given by Johan Gottschalk Wallerius, who discovered it in 1747.
There is no Latin term for Tungsten because it wasn't discovered until the late 18th century.
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Tungsten's original name is Wolfram that is why the symbol for Tungsten is a W
It does, if you speak Latin. Au is short for aurum, the Latin word for gold. Other cases where this is true: * Silver: Ag, from Latin argentum * Tin: Sn, from Latin stannum * Iron: Fe, from Latin ferrum * Lead: Pb, from Latin plumbum * Antimony: Sb, from Latin stibnum * Sodium: Na, from Latin natrium * Potassium: K, from Latin kalium (Some of those may be back-formations from the names of compounds, since the elements themselves weren't known in uncombined form while Latin was still a living language.) The only case where the symbol doesn't match (at least approximately) the name that does not come from Latin is tungsten: W, ultimately from wolframite, a tungsten ore (in some languages, the name for the metal is "wolfram" instead of tungsten).
Gold is aurum because that is the Latin for gold. There is no Latin word for tungsten because the Romans did not know it existed.However, the word aurum is where Gold got its chemical symbol - Au. Tungsten is known in German as wolfram and that is where it got its chemical symbol of W.So, if gold is aurum, then tungsten might bewolfram