It only contains two elements, such as sodium chloride (NaCl) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S).
not ending
When a metal combines with a non-metal (or by extension, any element or radical of low electronegativity combines with any element or radical of high electronegativity) then the non-metal takes the suffix -ide, indicating that it has been the recipient of one or more electrons in the bonding process, to which the metal has donated one or more electrons.
It means they shaved him
Integrated Device Electronics
It means never-ending joy.
The -ide ending typically indicates that the compound is made up of two elements, with the second element being a non-metal. These compounds are known as binary compounds.
The ide ending in a polyatomic ion actually has no practical meaning involved. The polyatomic compounds that do contain the ide ending have it because they were thought to be monatomic at one time.
i think that the ending for all names of binary compounds is ide. for example : NaCl is a binary ionic compound and it ends with and ide .
If anion is a single atom then ending is 'ide' if it is complex and also contains oxygen then with highest no of oxygen possible, ending is 'ate' otherwise is 'ite'
-ide
non metals . you change the ending of the non metal to "ide"
The ending "ide" typically indicates a chemical compound in organic chemistry. It is commonly found in the names of aldehydes and ketones, such as formaldehyde and acetone.
Juan is correct that compounds ending in -ide typically consist of two elements, where the first element is a cation and the second element is an anion.Examples of -ide compounds include sodium chloride (NaCl) and hydrogen sulfide (H2S).
An "-ide" ending in a compound typically indicates that the compound is a binary compound, meaning it consists of two different elements. The element with the "-ide" ending usually gains electrons to form an anion.
-ide is for example a suffix for salts.
They are examples of anions. Atoms or compounds with the ide ending are anions as are those with endings of ite or ate.
Binary ionic compounds are named by first stating the name of the cation (metal) followed by the name of the anion (nonmetal) with an -ide ending.