The name of an element depends on who discovered the element and when. Often the names have roots in other languages such as Greek or Latin. Some elements are named after the person who discovered the element or also after other famous scientists to honor that person.
For many elements, the symbol is just the first letter (or first two letters) of the name of the element. Note that the symbol for some elements is taken from the name in another language (Greek and Latin origins quite common) and is not the first two letters of the element's name in English.
See the Web Links for information about each elements' name! Click on any element in the Periodic Table and scroll down to see how and why it was named that way.
Some examples:
hydrogen, symbol H, is from the Greek words hudôr(water) and gennan (generate)
oxygen, symbol, O, is from the Greek words oxus(acid) and gennan (generate)
carbon, symbol C, is from the Latin carbo(coal)
lead, symbol Pb, is for plumbum, which is "lead" in Latin
gold, symbol Au, is for aurum, which is "gold" in Latin
iron, symbol Fe, is for ferrum, which is "iron" in Latin
silver, symbol Ag, is for argentum, which is "silver" in Latin
mercury, symbol Hg, is for hydrargyrum, which is for "liquid silver" in Latin
polonium, symbol Po, is named after Poland, the home country of Marie and Pierre Curie, the people who discovered it
curium, symbol Cm, after Pierre and Marie Curie for their contributions to chemistry (Curium was discovered by G. T. Seaborg)
lawrencium, symbol Lr, after Ernest Lawrence
beryllium, symbol B, after Berylli, California where much research was done on discovering new elements
the sybols come from latin and german he germans are big into chemistry and they named some of them and the romans were the first to find these elements and they named them in latin and we changed the real name but none of the symbols
On the table of elements.
There are several elements on the periodic table that have symbols derived from the names of countries. For instance, the element Francium (Fr) is named after France, and Polonium (Po) is named after Poland. Additionally, the symbol for the element Ruthenium (Ru) comes from Ruthenia, a historical region that largely corresponds to modern-day Ukraine. These elements reflect the cultural and geographical influences on the naming conventions in chemistry.
No. Most of the symbols for elements are derived from their names in English. Most of the elements were not even known in ancient Greece.
Symbols are the short forms to represent elements. Each element will have a unique symbol.
The symbols of the elements named after planets are: Lead (Pb) named after the planet Saturn Mercury (Hg) named after the planet Mercury Platinum (Pt) named after the dwarf planet Pluto Uranium (U) named after the planet Uranus Other elements also have symbols that may resemble planet symbols, but these are specifically named after planets.
Many elements names are of Greek and Latin words. Some elements are name after where named after countries like France, German ect.
the sybols come from latin and german he germans are big into chemistry and they named some of them and the romans were the first to find these elements and they named them in latin and we changed the real name but none of the symbols
All the elements listed on periodic table has symbols for them.There are total 118 elements in periodic table.
Some elements are named after the compound that they came from, or some attribute of it. Other elements are named after some aspect of the way in which the element was found. Still, there are other elements that get their names from places. Another interesting group of names comes from mythology. -Nev Singhota
Symbols of chemical elements are derived from the chemical name.
On the table of elements.
There are several elements on the periodic table that have symbols derived from the names of countries. For instance, the element Francium (Fr) is named after France, and Polonium (Po) is named after Poland. Additionally, the symbol for the element Ruthenium (Ru) comes from Ruthenia, a historical region that largely corresponds to modern-day Ukraine. These elements reflect the cultural and geographical influences on the naming conventions in chemistry.
some elements do not use their first letters of their English names as their symbols. The symbols for these elements may come from the names of the elements in a different language.
symbols of the elements symbols of the elements
The four elements of the triangle symbols are fire, water, air, and earth.
Chemical symbols indicate elements.