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one with the highest number of element and compounds symbols will be chosen as best answer.

example
o - oxygen

2006-12-06 23:43:35 · 16 answers · asked by Sanket R 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

16 answers

H- HYDROGEN
O- OXYGEN
S- SULPHUR
N- NITROGEN
Al- ALUMINIUM
Cu- COPPER (CUPRUM)
Zn- ZINC
Ni- NICKEL
P- PLUTONIUM (RADIO ACITVE ELEMENT)
Th- THORIUM (RADIO ACITVE ELEMENT)
Zi - ZIRCONIUM
Pb-LEAD (PLUBBUM)
Fe-IRON (ORIGIN :FERRUM)
Hg- MERCURY (HYDRARGYRUM)
Au- GOLD (AURUM)
Ag- SILVER (ARGENTINUM)
Si- SILICON
K - POTTASIUM (KALIUM)
La- LANTHANUM
B - BORON
Br- BROMINE
Li- LITHIUM
Ma- MANGANESE
Mg- MAGNESIUM
Ca- CALCIUM
Na- SODIUM (NATRIUM)
Ge- GERMANIUM
Cd- CADIUM
St- TIN (STANNUM)
U- URANIUM
Np- NEPTUNIUM
He- HELIUM
Y- YTTRIUM
Rh- RHODIUM
Pt- PLATINUM
Ar- ARGON
Ba- BARIUM
Cr- CHROMIUM
Co- COBALT
Ra- RADIUM
Sb-ANTIMONY (STIBIUM)
W- TUNGSTEN (WOLFRAM)
I - IODINE
L- LIGAND
Un- UNUNOCTIUM
Us- UNUNSEPTIUM
Am- AMERICIUM (NAMED AFTER AMERICA)
Bk- BERKELIUN (NAMED AFTER BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA)
Cf- CALIFORNIUM (NAMED AFTER CALIFORNIA)
Eu- EUROPIUM (NAMED AFTER EUROPE)
AND SOME OTHER COMMON NAMES ARE
darmstadtium – Darmstadt, Germany
dubnium – Dubna, Russia
erbium – Ytterby, Sweden
europium – Europe
francium – France
gallium – Gallia, Latin for France. Frenchman Lecoq de Boisbaudran, who was the discoverer of the metal, named it after his country and also subtly for himself. Lecoq (rooster) in Latin is gallus.
germanium – Germany
hafnium – Hafnia, Latin for Copenhagen
hassium – Hesse, Germany
holmium – Holmia, Latin for Stockholm
lutetium – Lutetia, Latin for Paris
magnesium – Magnesia prefecture in Thessaly, Greece
polonium – Poland
rhenium – Rhenus, Latin for Rhine
ruthenium – Ruthenia, Latin for Rus'
scandium – Scandia, Latin for Scandinavia
strontium – Strontian, Scotland
terbium – Ytterby, Sweden
thulium – Thule, a mythical island in the far north, perhaps Scandinavia
ytterbium – Ytterby, Sweden
yttrium – Ytterby, Sweden
Note: Ytterby in Sweden has given its name to four elements: Erbium, Terbium, Ytterbium and Yttrium.

Additionally, the following elements are named after astronomical objects:

cerium – Ceres
helium – Helios, the Greek name for the Sun
neptunium
– Neptune
palladium – Pallas
plutonium – Pluto
selenium – Selene, the Greek name for the Moon
tellurium – Tellus, the Latin name for the Earth
uranium – Uranus
ELEMENTS
Actinium Ac
Arsenic As
Astatine At 85
Beryllium Be Bismuth Bi
Bohrium Bh
Caesium (Cesium) Cs
Cerium Ce
Caesium Cs
Curium Cm
Darmstadtium Ds
Dubnium Db
Dysprosium Dy
Einsteinium Es
Erbium Er
Europium Eu
Fermium Fm
Fluorine F
Francium Fr
Gadolinium Gd 64
Gallium Ga 31
Hafnium Hf 72
Hassium Hs
Holmium Ho
Indium In
Iridium Ir
Krypton Kr
Lawrencium Lr
Lutetium Lu
Actinium Ac
ELEMENTS NAMEDAFTER PERSONS
bohrium (Bh, 107) – Niels Bohr
curium (Cm, 96) – Pierre and Marie Curie
einsteinium (Es, 99) – Albert Einstein
fermium (Fm, 100) – Enrico Fermi
gallium (Ga, 31) – although named after Gallia (Latin for France), the discoverer of the metal Lecoq de Boisbaudran subtly attached an association with his name. Lecoq (rooster) in Latin is gallus.
gadolinium (Gd, 64) – Johan Gadolin
hahnium (105) – Otto Hahn. This element name is not accepted by IUPAC. See element naming controversy
lawrencium (Lr, 103) – Ernest Lawrence
meitnerium (Mt, 109) – Lise Meitner
mendelevium (Md, 101) – Dmitri Mendeleev
nobelium (No, 102) – Alfred Nobel
roentgenium (Rg, 111) – Wilhelm Roentgen
rutherfordium (Rf, 104) – Ernest Rutherford
seaborgium (Sg, 106) – Glenn T. Seaborg

Named after mythical characters

niobium (Nb, 41) – Niobe, a mortal woman in Greek mythology
promethium (Pm, 61) – Prometheus, a Titan from Greek mythology
tantalum (Ta, 73) – Tantalus, from Greek mythology
thorium (Th, 90) – Thor, the Norse god of thunder
titanium (Ti, 22) – the Titans, from Greek mythology
vanadium (V, 23) – Scandinavian goddess Vanadis (Freyja)
Many chemical elements are named after astronomical bodies which are named after Greek or Roman deities. See Chemical elements named after places.


Note :

Gadolinium (Gd, 64) is named from the mineral gadolinite, which in turn is named after the Finnish chemist and geologist Johan Gadolin.
Samarium (Sm, 62) is named from the mineral samarskite which in turn is named after Vasili Samarsky-Bykhovets, a Russian mine official. .

HOPE THIS IS ENOUGH FOR U.

2006-12-07 10:54:33 · answer #1 · answered by Aditya N 2 · 1 0

H hydrogen
He helium
Li lithium
Be berylium
B boron
C carbon
N nitrogen
O oxygen
F flourine
Ne neon
Na sodium
Mg magnesium
Al aluminiun
Si silicon
P phosphorus
S sulphur
Cl chlorine
Ar argon
K potassium
Ca calcium
Sc scandanium
Ti titanium
V vanadium
Cr chromium
Fe iron
Co cobalt
Ni nickel
Cu copper
Zn zinc
ga gallium
Ge germanium
As arsenic
Se selenium
Br bromine
Kr krypton
Rb rubidium
Sr strontium
Y yttrium
Zr zironium
Nb niobium
Mo molybdenum
Tc technitium
Rh ruthenium
Rh rhodium
Pd palladium
Ag silver
Cd cadmium
In indium
Sn tin
Sb antimony
Te tellurium
I iodine
Xe xenon
Cs cesium
Ba barium
La lanthanum
Hf tantalum
Ta tangsten
W tungsten
Re rhenium
Os osmium
Ir iridium
Pt platinum
Au gold
Hg mrrcury
Tl thallium
Pb lead
Bi bismuth
Po polonium
At astatine
Rn radon
Fr francium
Ra radium
Ac actinium
Rf rutherfordium
Db dubnium
Sg seaborgium
Bh bohrium
Hs hassium
Mt meitnerium
Uun unuulium
Uuu unununium
Uub ununbium
Uuq ununquadium
Uuh ununhexium

2006-12-07 02:39:03 · answer #2 · answered by Angel 2 · 0 0

H - Hydrogen
He - Helium
B - Boron
Li - Lithium
N - Nitrogen
Cl - Chloride
O - Oxygen
Ne - Neon
Kr - Krypton
Ag - Silver
Au - Gold
K - Potassium
Xe - Xeon
Ar - Argon
Mg - Magnesium
Ur - Uranium
Po - Polanium
C - Carbon
Fl - Floride
Fe - Iron
Mn - Manganese

Are you sure you want compounds because just about any 2+ elements will make a compound (NaCl, MgCl)

2006-12-06 23:56:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

H - Hydrogen
He - Helium
B - Boron
Li - Lithium
N - Nitrogen
Cl - Chloride
O - Oxygen
Pt-Platinum
Ne - Neon
Ar_argon
Kr - Krypton
Ag - Silver
Hg_hydragyrum(Mercury)
Au - Gold
K - Potassium
Xe - Xeon
Mg - Magnesium
Ur - Uranium
Po - Polanium
C - Carbon
Fl - Floride
Fe - Iron
Mn - Manganese
I-Iodide
Ca-Calcium
Cu_Cuprum(Copper)
Ga-Gallium
Ge-germanium
Ra-radium
Al-Aluminum
Rn-Radon
Si-Silicon


and for the compounds.... starting with basic NaCl to the complex proteins there are a lot of them and I don't have the patience...

2006-12-07 00:13:31 · answer #4 · answered by Eshwar 3 · 0 0

Po-Polonium
F-Fluorine
Cl-chlorine
Br-Bromine
I-Iodine
He-Helium
Ne-Neon
Kr-Krypton
Ar-Argon
Xe-Xenon
Na-Sodium
K-Potassium
Cs-Caesium
Rb-Rubedium
Mg-Magnesium
Ca-Calcium
Db-Dubium
Ja-Jalmium
H – Hydrogen
F-Fluorine
Cl-chlorine
Br-Bromine
I-Iodine
He-Helium
Ne-Neon
Kr-Krypton
Ar-Argon
Xe-Xenon
Na-Sodium
K-Potassium
Cs-Caesium
Rb-Rubedium
Mg-Magnesium
Ca-Calcium
Db-Dubium
Ja-Jalmium
N - Nitrogen
Cl - Chloride
O - Oxygen
Ne - Neon
Kr - Krypton
Ag - Silver
Au - Gold
K - Potassium
Xe - Xeon
Ar - Argon
Mg - Magnesium
Ur - Uranium
Po - Polanium
C - Carbon
Fl - Floride
Fe - Iron
Mn – Manganese
Sr-Strontium
Ba-Barium
Cu-Copper
Zn-Zinc
Cr-Chromium
Co-Cobalt
V-Vanadium
Mn-Manganese

2006-12-09 20:25:01 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

chromium(III) oxide, Cr2O3
carbon tetrachloride, CCl4
methanol, CH3OH
strontium fluoride, SrF2
methanol, CH3OH
strontium fluoride, SrF2
Carbon C
Fluorine F
Hydrogen H
Iodine I
Nitrogen N
Oxygen O
Phosphorus P
Sulfur S
Aluminum Al
Barium Ba
Calcium Ca
Chlorine Cl
Helium He
Magnesium Mg
Platinum Pt
Silicon Si
Copper Cu (from cuprum)
Iron Fe (from ferrum)
Lead Pb (from plumbum)
Mercury Hg (from hydrargyrum)
Potassium K (from kalium)
Silver Ag (from argentum)
Sodium Na (from natrium)
Tin Sn (from stannum)
NaCl sodium chloride
H2SO4 sulfuric acid
HNO3 nitric acid
NaOH sodium hydroxide
HCL hydrochloric acid

2006-12-07 00:22:55 · answer #6 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

how about the elements that can form radioactive materials :)
H - hydrogen
C - carbon
O - oxygen
Co - cobalt
Po - polonium
At - astatine
Rn - radon
Xe - xenon
I - iodine
Sr - strontium
and my favourite
U - uranium
here's more
Unq - unnilquadium
Unp - unnilpentium
Uno - unniloctium
Une - unnilennium

2006-12-07 00:44:19 · answer #7 · answered by misty_mirror 1 · 0 0

na sodium
C carbon
H Hydrogen
Se selinum
Fe Iron
S sulphur
N nitrogen
Hg Mercury
H2SO4 hydrogen sulphide
Be berillum

i'm bored now

2006-12-06 23:47:12 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

B-Boron
Al-Aluminium
Ga-Gallium
In-Indium
Tl-Thallium
C-Carbon
Si-Silicon
Ge-Germanium
Sn-Tin
Pb-Lead
N-Nitrogen
P-Phosphorous
As-Arsenic
Bi-Bismuth
O-Oxygen
S-Sulphur
Se-Selenium
Te-Tellurium
Po-Polonium
F-Fluorine
Cl-chlorine
Br-Bromine
I-Iodine
He-Helium
Ne-Neon
Kr-Krypton
Ar-Argon
Xe-Xenon
Na-Sodium
K-Potassium
Cs-Caesium
Rb-Rubedium
Mg-Magnesium
Ca-Calcium
Sr-Strontium
Ba-Barium
Cu-Copper
Zn-Zinc
Cr-Chromium
Co-Cobalt
V-Vanadium
Mn-Manganese
Fe- Iron
Form the compounds now its easy!!

2006-12-07 00:07:14 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

hmm..seems more like a fight to give u the longest list of elements and compunds...rather than giving u the right stuff...

2006-12-07 03:38:50 · answer #10 · answered by mad_integer 3 · 0 0

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