K= Kallium ( Greek, I think ) Na= Naturium, which is Latin.
Sodium is Na, potassium is K, rubidium is Rb.
Symbols are as follows: Na for sodium K for potassium Pt for platinum O for oxygen
Li Na K Rb Cs Fr (hope this is help)
H Li Na K Rb Cs
Lithium is ' Li '. Sodium is ' Na '. (From Latin for Nadium). Potassium is ' K '. (From Latin for Kalium). Have a look at the Periodic Table. The first left hand column ( Group (I)) , contain these elements. The whole table contains all the known elements and their symbols.
Sodium: Na Potassium: K ...seriously?
These symbols are the standardized symbols for chemical elements: some examples are Na, K, Li, Ca, Mg, Th, Cu, Fe etc.
Sodium, Na. Potassium, K. Calcium, Ca. Magnesium, Mg. Chlorine, Cl. Bicarbonate should be CO2. Phosphorus, P.
Sever symbols are located in the first column of the periodic table.These are H,Li,Na,K,Rb,Cs and Fr.These all are alkali metals.
Na+-K+ ATPase
'K' is potassium. The 'K' comes from the Latin name for potassium, which is 'Kalium'. In elemental symbols on the Periodic Table., there are a number of other elements with Latin symbols. viz; Na ; Sodium/ Nadium Fe ; Iron/Ferrum Hg ; Mercury/Hydragyrum Sn ; Tin/ Stannum. To name but a few.
The symbols for the specified elements are as follows: Sodium (Na), Hydrogen (H), Potassium (K), Lead (Pb), Chlorine (Cl), Iodine (I), and Sulfur (S).