The word "element" originates from the Latin word "elementum," which referred to the fundamental principles of nature, such as earth, air, fire, and water. The exact individual who first coined the word is unknown due to its ancient origins.
It seems to me that the element called "oxygen" is not named after another element and that the element is most likely named by itself.
The symbol for oxygen, "O," comes from the first letter of the element's name. It was coined by Antoine Lavoisier in the late 18th century when he classified oxygen as an element.
The Greeks, from the word atomon, meaning "uncuttable, indivisible."
Helium is an inert gaseous element. This is a sentence using the word "element".
The element sodium comes from the Latin word "natrium."
It seems to me that the element called "oxygen" is not named after another element and that the element is most likely named by itself.
The term "element" was coined by the ancient Greek philosopher Empedocles in the 5th century BCE. He proposed that everything in the universe was composed of four basic elements: earth, water, air, and fire.
it was coined in 1382
The Phonological word was a term first coined by linguist Robert M.W. Dixon in 1977. Phonological grammar is the study of the sounds of how a word is pronounced such as its stress or accent.
Neologism
Italian painter who coined the word automobile
I believe it was coined in 1833 by Scottish geologist Charles Lyell.
Eratosthenes
Pythagoras
Democritus
The word "sarcasm" is believed to have been coined in 1382. It originates from the Greek word "sarkasmos," which means a tearing of the flesh or a bitter sneer.
w.johannsen in 1909