I would give it an obscure name that no one living in the UK/USA could pronounce, meaning they'd need to change the name to something different.
Otherwise, give it your name + a normalic ending, -dium as an example.
The element that would have properties most similar to the new element would be an element that lies in the same group as the new element. Specifically, the element with the most similar properties will lie directly above or below that element in the group.
The new element would have an atomic number of 119.
the second element or the negative one ends in ide. While a free element would just end the way it normally would. example: if you were trying to combine Aluminum and oxygen the compounds name would be aluminum oxide.
Gold
In mid-1885, at a mine near Freiberg, Saxony, a new mineral was discovered and named argyrodite because of the high silver content. The chemist Clemens Winkler analyzed this new mineral, which proved to be a combination of silver, sulfur, and a new element. Winkler was able to isolate the new element in 1886 and found it similar to antimony. Before Winkler published his results on the new element, he decided that he would name his element neptunium, since the recent discovery of planet Neptune in 1846 had been preceded by mathematical predictions of its existence. However, the name "neptunium" had already been given to another proposed chemical element (though not the element that today bears the name neptunium, which was discovered in 1940). So instead, Winkler named the new element germanium (from the Latin word, Germania, for Germany) in honor of his homeland.
RUTHENIUM is the the new name of the element and the symbol of this is RU.
The element that would have properties most similar to the new element would be an element that lies in the same group as the new element. Specifically, the element with the most similar properties will lie directly above or below that element in the group.
The new element would have an atomic number of 119.
the second element or the negative one ends in ide. While a free element would just end the way it normally would. example: if you were trying to combine Aluminum and oxygen the compounds name would be aluminum oxide.
Gold
People or institutions that discover a new element have the first right to name them
you would place it according to its atomic number
In mid-1885, at a mine near Freiberg, Saxony, a new mineral was discovered and named argyrodite because of the high silver content. The chemist Clemens Winkler analyzed this new mineral, which proved to be a combination of silver, sulfur, and a new element. Winkler was able to isolate the new element in 1886 and found it similar to antimony. Before Winkler published his results on the new element, he decided that he would name his element neptunium, since the recent discovery of planet Neptune in 1846 had been preceded by mathematical predictions of its existence. However, the name "neptunium" had already been given to another proposed chemical element (though not the element that today bears the name neptunium, which was discovered in 1940). So instead, Winkler named the new element germanium (from the Latin word, Germania, for Germany) in honor of his homeland.
calcium
The element with an atomic number of 113 is Ununtrium.
Gold is an element with the symbol Au (Due to its Latin name Aurum).
chromium