Fluorine (:
Calcium from the Latin word calcis.
Argentina is not named after a chemical element. The name "Argentina" is believed to come from the Latin word "argentum," which means silver. Argentina is named for the precious metal silver that was historically abundant in the region.
Copper was named after Cyprus, as the Latin word for the island is "Cuprum." Cyprus has historically been a major source of copper ore.
The name is derived from the Latin word "fluores" with the meaning "which flow"; fluorine minerals were used in the past as flux in metallurgy.
Gold? Silver? Copper? Gold colored, silver colored, copper colored.
The element is named Fluorine. It comes from the Latin word "fluere" because its compounds, known as fluorides, are frequently used as fluxes in metallurgy due to their ability to lower the melting points of metal oxides.
It was not named after anybody. The word "flute" comes from the Latin root "fluere", meaning "to flow".
Fluorine gets its name from the Latin word "fluere," which means "to flow." This is because fluorine's ore, fluorspar, was used as a flux in metal refining due to its ability to make metals flow more easily.
fluo *is* a root word, if I'm not mistaken.
The root word of influx is "fluere," which is Latin for "to flow."
The English word for fluere is "flow."
"Confluence" is from the Latin prefix con- ("together") and verb fluere, "to flow".
iridium
It's iridium.
According to the entry for fluorine in wikipedia, this name is based on an invented Latin word due to Georgius Agricola. "[H]e created the Latin noun fluorés, from fluo(flow)." Later Humphrey Davy suggested that this element be named similarly to other halogens such as chlorine.
No. It is named after Gallia (Latin for France)
The element named after the German word for Satan is "Lutetium," which comes from the Latin term "lutetia" meaning "mud."