I really do not know what the answer for this question is.
Compounds are made out of atoms of different elements. The properties are different than the properties of the constituent elements.For example, Water is made out of Hydrogen and Oxygen. Both Oxygen and Hydrogen are gasses at room temperature. Water is a liquid at room temperature with very different properties.
Because the elements of the column have similar chemical properties and follow trends in the columns
Elements in the same family-assuming family means classifications such as non-metals, metals-have similar properties.
The properties from the original elements are all left behind; almost no compound shows any of the properties of its constituent elements (the most widely used example of this is sodium and chlorine forming sodium chloride).
Every atom has a certain number of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Different elements have different amounts of these. Particularly, different elements have different numbers of protons. For example, if an atom only has 1 proton it must be hydrogen.
he properties of salts are different from the properties of elements that go into making them
The chemical and physical properties of a compound are different than those of the elements from which it is formed.
Compounds of different elements can have different properties because their properties are determined by the arrangement and interactions of the atoms within the compound. The types and numbers of elements present in a compound will influence its physical and chemical properties.
The properties of a compound are different from the properties of its individual elements. When elements combine to form compounds, the resulting compound can exhibit entirely new characteristics that are distinct from those of the individual elements.
False. Hydrogen and oxygen - both gases - combine to form water - a liquid.
Different names, different elements, different properties.
This statement is a simplified explanation of the periodic law, which states that the properties of elements are periodic functions of their atomic numbers. This periodicity is observed in the arrangement of elements in the periodic table, where elements with similar properties appear in the same column (group) due to their similar electron configurations.
The properties of a compound are different from those of the elements that make it up. Compounds have unique physical and chemical properties that arise from the way the elements are bonded together, whereas the properties of individual elements are based on their atomic structure. Mixing elements together to form a compound can result in properties that are entirely different from those of the individual elements.
the compound has properties that are different from the two elements the bonded, as it is a new substance
A substance that has properties different from the chemical elements in it is a chemical compound. A chemical compound is built from chemical elements that are chemically bonded together. And the "finished product" will have chemical properties that are unique to that compound, and different from the properties of the substances that make it up.
The individual elements from which the compound is formed
This affirmation is not correct.