Potassium has a chemical symbol that is derived from a Latin name.
Sn is the symbol for tin. (from Latin: stannum)
It comes from the Latin as in cuprous etc.
Pb comes from the Latin word plumbum, and it's the chemical symbol for lead.
Au is the elemental abbreviation for gold.
Wolfram is what tungsten used to be called, which is why W is its chemical symbol.
Two substances that have chemical substances derived from Latin are Au (from the word aurum) and Na (for natrium/sodium).
Sulfur has the chemical symbol of "S. " This symbol is derived from its name "sulfur," which is Latin for "brimstone. "
Aurum.
The Latin name, from which the chemical symbol was derived, was stibnium.
The Latin name, from which the chemical symbol was derived, was stibnium.
The Latin name, from which the chemical symbol was derived, was plumbum.
Lead. The symbol is derived from its Latin name; Plumbum
Pb is derived from plumbum, the name in the Latin language.
"Argent" is heraldic name for silver and is derived from Latin argentum, from which the chemical symbol for silver is also derived.
The metal with the chemical symbol Pb is lead, Pb is derived from the Latin word plumbum, meaning soft metal.
Very simple: Hf from hafnium !
Ferrum is the Latin equivalent of 'iron'. It's the word from which the symbol for iron is derived. Its symbol is 'Fe', which is taken from the first two letters of the word in Latin.