There is no Tin(II) dioxide. It is Tin dioxide (SnO2) or Tin(II) oxide (SnO)
"Good" can be "ii" (as in good/nice) or "yoroshii" (good/acceptable).
'Soreja ii'.
The japanese word of song is "uta"and beautifull is"ii"...so you can say it in japanese..."ii uta"
"Atama ga ii neko."
'Itsu made matte mo ii.'
Tin(II) oxide or tin dioxide
There are two such tin oxides: Tin (II) oxide with formula SnO and tin (IV) dioxide, with formula SnO2.
The Answer To Your Question Is.... tin (IV) oxide
The name of SnCrO4 is Tin II Chromate or stannous chromate.
Tin (II) Bromide.
Tin Machine II was created in 1989.
Stannous Oxide or Tin (II) Oxide
Bronze is an alloy that consists of copper and usually tin. When added to nitric acid, the nitrate anions attack the tin and copper cations to produce copper (II) nitrate and Tin (II) nitrate. Nitrogen monoxide is released but reacts with oxygen in the air to produce nitrogen dioxide.
That is Tin (II) Chloride. Sn is Tin and the suffix for Chlorine is nearly always Chloride. The (II) means the Tin [in a hypothetical situation where the compound was purely ionic] has an oxidation state of 2, or +2, (ie deficient of two electrons) Source: A2 Chemistry Student.
Tin has two oxidation states (II and IV), and exhibits approximately equal stability in both its II and IV oxidation state. The chemical formula Tin (II) Iodide is SnI2. The chemical formula for Tin (IV) Iodide is SnI4.
Tin(IV) selenide
Tin (II) Oxolate