Anions end in -ide if they are monatomic. Example: chlorine becomes "chloride." Polyatomic ions will have different suffixes.
if the negative ion is a single element, the end of its name changes to -ide
Anions end in -ide if they are monatomic. Example: chlorine becomes "chloride." Polyatomic ions will have different suffixes.
Anions end in -ide if they are monatomic. Example: chlorine becomes "chloride." Polyatomic ions will have different suffixes.
Anions end in -ide if they are monatomic. Example: chlorine becomes "chloride." Polyatomic ions will have different suffixes.
When an element forms a negative ion, the name changes to IDE, fir example: chloride
If it's an ion with a negative charge, it is an anion.
The typical suffix used for a negative ion is -ide as in chloride, oxide, sulfide, etc.
Hydroxide ion
No. The hydroxide ion has a negative charge as do all ions ending in -ide, -ite, or -ate.
No: Anions of nonmetals end in the suffix -ide, but no element name ends in this group of letters.
It would include, nitride, oxide, fluoride and so would be anions or negative ions.
This is a binary salt.