Ferrous
Ferrum.
The word, acerbic, comes from the Latin word, acere and means to be sour. Acidic is another term for something that is sour.
The late Latin word for a Buffalo was "Bufalus," where the earlier Latin term for a Buffalo was "Bubalus." It comes from the Greek word "Boubalos"
The English term "autotroph" means self-feeding and actually comes from Greek roots, not Latin. In fact, there is no unique Latin equivalent for this word.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'metal' was the following: metallum. But the word wasn't a common choice by writers in ancient, classical Latin. For they instead tended to refer to a metal by its actual name, such as 'aurum' for 'gold' and 'ferrum' for 'iron'.
The symbol "Fe" for iron comes from the Latin word for iron, "ferrum."
The abbreviation comes from the latin term ferrum.
It comes from the Latin name for iron, 'ferrum.'
Latin adjective "ferreus" means: iron, hard, ferrous, cruel, unfeeling, heartless
"Fe" is the symbol for ironas the old latin name for the metal is "ferrum"
Not all element symbols come from English words. Iron is one example. Fe comes from the Latin word for iron: ferrum. In chemistry 'ferric' indicates the trivalent ion, Fe3+ and 'ferrous' indicates the divalent ion, Fe2+. Ferric oxide or Iron(III) oxide is rust, Fe2O3. There are other examples including: Tungsten, W for wolfram; Sodium, Na for natrium; Potassium, K for kalium.
Ferrum.
The Latin word for steel is "ferrum."
The medical root for iron is "ferro-" or "ferr-" which comes from the Latin word for iron, "ferrum".
Ferrite - also known as alpha iron - comes from the Latin word for iron, ferrum.
It comes from the Latin word for Iron "Ferrum". The prefix ferr- means that it is of or contains Iron.
Ferrum ist das lateinische Wort für Eisen. Ferrum is the Latin word for iron.