Just because
None. Prefixes come in front of a root word .
apex Compounds made from two nonmetals Sharing of electrons
Different things for different prefixes. Meth, eth, prop, etc. are prefixes in organic chemistry that tell you that there are 1, 2, 3, etc. carbon atoms in a compound. Other prefixes mean other things. But you need to learn the rules for naming compounds, because there are exceptions. CO has just one carbon, but its name has nothing to do with the meth prefix. It is called carbon monoxide.
Un- , dis- and en- are all prefixes that can be put in front of able.
No prefix is used if it is an ionic compound. If it is a binary molecular compound, the prefix mono- is not used in front of the name of the first element. For example, the ionic compound Na2O is sodium oxide, not disodium monoxide, and the molecular compound CO2 is carbon dioxide, not monocarbon dioxide.
HNO3 acids always have a hydrogen in front.
a prefixes is a group of letters that are fixed to the front of the root word. A suffixes is the main word for example dislike. dis is the prefixes and like is the suffixes
Root words can be at the front or back of a word.
Any of the following prefixes in front of second. Deci, centi, milli, micro, nano, pico, femto, atto etc.
When you have a covalent compound. For example, N2O3 would me Dinitrogen trioxide. Always remember, 1. Identify metal, non-metal 2. write out element names 3. If both are non-metal (covalent), count how many of each element there is 4. Place the proper prefix in front of each element.
Anter and posterior both mean the front of so you don't use them togeather. They are both Prefixes
B6Si