Of course Latin - oxygenium
Oxygen was named after the ancient Greek word oxys, meaning acid, and genes, meaning forming, because oxygen was found in most common acids.
Calcium has a chemical symbol Ca from the Latin word "calx" meaning lime; Hydrogen has a chemical symbol H, derived from the Greek words "hydro" (water) and "genes" (forming); Potassium has a chemical symbol K, derived from the Latin word "kalium"; Oxygen has a chemical symbol O, derived from the Greek words "oxys" (acid) and "genes" (forming).
The name "oxygen" was coined in the 18th century by the French chemist Antoine Lavoisier. It is derived from the Greek words "oxys" (acid) and "genes" (forming), reflecting its role in the formation of acids.
The English word "oxygen" comes from Latin and means something like "acid former", because a lot of acids do contain oxygen.
The latin name for Titanium is Titanium. The Czech name for Titanium is Titan.
Zeus is his Greek name - Jupiter in Latin. Zeus is his Greek name. Jupiter is his Roman name.Zeus is the Greek name. Do you mean Jupiter or Jove, which were his Latin names?
Yes, Luna is a Latin name meaning "moon." It is not of Greek origin.
Latin: HYDROGENIUM Greek: υδρογόνο (ydrogóno) Scientists simply say, "Hydrogen"
The Latin name for europium is Europium (symbol: Eu), taken from the continent Europe where it was discovered. Its Greek name is Ευρώπιο (Efρωπιο).
PerseuV was the Greek name, it was translated as Perseus as the Latin name.
Jasonus McDonoughdi is the name Jason Mcdonough in Latin or Greek.
Venus IS her Latin name, Aphrodite her Greek counterpart.
Greek and Latin. Alpha is a Greek letter; Centauri is the Latin genitive form of the (Latin) word Centaurus which is the name of the constellation.
The Latin name was Londinium.There was no ancient Greek name for London.
Minerva was the Latin name of the Greek goddess Athena.
In the English name, Mary Poppins? There are no Greek or Latin derivatives.
oxygenium.