ic, as in hydrochloric or sulfuric acid.
Nitric acid is a compound of nitrate and hydrogen (you can tell that the suffix is -ate by the suffix -ic. If it were nitrous acid, it would contain nitrite.) Its chemical formula is HN03
-ous
No acid, no bases but salts ! - ate: carbonate, sulfate, phosphate, chlorate - ide: nitride, boride, sulphide, arsenide
Bleach (ilove2dance)Hydrochlorous acid does not exist. The -ous naming suffix is only used for anions that end in -ite, like the hypochlorite ion. However, an acid with that ion would be named hypochlorous acid. Hydro is only used as a prefix if the anion is not an oxoanion, one that contains oxygen. Hydrochlorous acid does not exist.
Only carboxylic acids contain carboxyl groups. Only organic acids have them--obviously, since an organic acid contains carbon and so does a carboxyl group. So...most acids don't contain carboxyl groups.
the suffix -ate. chlorate -> chloric acid; carbonate -> carbonic acid
The suffix is -os.
Antacid
In this case acid is not a prefix, but -ic is the suffix...it means full of acid or contains acid.
Nitric acid is a compound of nitrate and hydrogen (you can tell that the suffix is -ate by the suffix -ic. If it were nitrous acid, it would contain nitrite.) Its chemical formula is HN03
-ous
At the end of every code for an amino acid is the suffix -ineFor Example:MethionineValineLeucineAlanineSerineThis should probably be it :)
No acid, no bases but salts ! - ate: carbonate, sulfate, phosphate, chlorate - ide: nitride, boride, sulphide, arsenide
No, yet the anaerobic [without Oxygen] production of Lactic Acid (note that the -ic suffix denotes acid) - will and does cause temporary, mildly painful, damage.
To make. Clarify - to make clear Identify - to make known Acidify - to make acid Amplify - to make louder
Polyglactin 910 consists on 9 molecules of polyglycolic acid and 1 molecule of lactic acid (90:10 ratio) that is 9 PGA molecules and 10th molecule of lactic acid thus it has suffix 910
When the anion name ends in -ite, the acid name is the stem of the anion with the suffix -ous, followed by the word acid.-ite being the noun form of the compound-ous being the adjective form of the compoundThe form -ous can be used in such a case of the compound sulfite.For ExampleAnion Name Example Acid Name Example-ite sulfite (stem)-ous acid sulfurous acidWhen you name the compound as an acid you add the suffix -ous, and take away the suffix -ite