Chlorine comes from the Greek word 'χλωρóς' khlôros, meaning 'pale green'
Chlorine is the common name used. the symbol is Cland the atomic number is 17.
Chlorine is a scientific name.
If you mean chlorine as in the poisonous green gas, then you could call it "chlorine gas" or "diatomic chlorine" to be precise in what you mean.
The Latin name for chlorine is chlorum. In French this word is said as chlore, in Spanish as cloro, and in German as chlor.
If you mean the one on the P.T. , then it is Cl
Chlorine has only one name which is used in science as well. Its symbol is Cl.
In the English language is chlorine.
yes
chloris
I'm not sure if there is any scientific reason behind it, but chlorine definitely gives me stomach pains, just from the smell of it.
the scientific explanation in that experiment is the chlorine f**k the coca cola so the bottle explodes because the sperm cell and the egg cell has been united and that explodes because they had created baby...
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CuCI is made out of calcium and chlorine . The compound is called calcium chlorine.
ClF5 Is the formula for Chlorine pentaflouride.
Yes, chlorine is a scientific name in English language; other maes in others languages.
This would be chlorine hexafluoride.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Amanita chlorinosma.
how did making models contibute to understanding of chlorine as a disinfectant
salt is made up of sodium & chlorine, & that's why its scientific name is NaCl- sodium chloride. sodium, though, makes up the majority of table salt.
In English, also chlorine.
Chlorine
IUPAC naming only applies to compounds. The IUPAC name for chlorine is chlorine. In nature chlorine exists as a diatomic compound Cl2 called dichlorine.
Cl2 is chlorine. Chlorine exists as a diatomic molecule.
IUPAC naming only applies to compounds. The IUPAC name for chlorine is chlorine. In nature chlorine exists as a diatomic compound Cl2 called dichlorine.
The name of the group 7 elements that chlorine is included in, are called Halogens.
· carbon · chemical reaction · chlorine