The weird ways the elements got their names

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
  • Where do our words for the chemical elements come from? The answers are certain to surprise you. In this linguistic tour of the periodic table, discover:
    🤷 Whether it's aluminUM or aluminIUM
    🥇 Why the chemical symbol for gold is Au, not Go
    🧌 The secret mythical figures hiding in the periodic table
    🌍 Which place has the most elements named after it (you won't guess)
    So let's get in our element, and explore the fascinating stories behind our names for the elements.
    Check me out online, on Twitter & TikTok:
    robwords.com
    / robwordsyt
    / robwords
    ==CHAPTERS==
    0:00 Introduction
    0:42 Hydrogen, Oxygen and friends
    2:40 Helium & Aluminium
    4:33 Carbon, Gold, Silver, Mercury
    6:55 Ytterby elements
    9:35 Named after places
    10:29 Mythology elements
    12:47 Named for characteristics
    13:46 Named after people
    14:13 Confusing chemical symbols
    15:07 Interrupted by dog

Комментарии • 2 тыс.

  • @vde1846
    @vde1846 Год назад +881

    In Swedish Hydrogen and Oxygen are called "Väte" and "Syre" respectively, which are also translations of the Greek terms since rendered in English they'd be something like "Wetter" and "Sourer" i.e. "that which wets" and "that which sours."

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +62

      I think you mean "sourer". Oxygen is "Sauerstoff" (sour stuff) in German, too.

    • @mellertid
      @mellertid Год назад +43

      Then there is Nitrogen: Kväve, from kväva = suffocate.

    • @paulbrennan4163
      @paulbrennan4163 Год назад +3

      Coolt! 🙂

    • @SpiritmanProductions
      @SpiritmanProductions Год назад +14

      @@UCKY5 In Dutch, 'stof' has multiple meanings. In element names, it means 'material', not 'stuff' or 'dust'. ;)

    • @elricthebald870
      @elricthebald870 Год назад +10

      ​@@UCKY5 Dont forget 'koolstof' (carbon): coal stuff.

  • @markmcgoveran6811
    @markmcgoveran6811 Год назад +1842

    I'm an engineer and it would be delightful if you would do a full version of this and discuss each element in order on a separate video for people who aren't bored easily. This is kind of like a spreadsheet with holes in it.

    • @lewisgiles8855
      @lewisgiles8855 Год назад +47

      Agreed

    • @MissingRaptor
      @MissingRaptor Год назад +31

      I would love to watch a video like this 😃

    • @markmcgoveran6811
      @markmcgoveran6811 Год назад +56

      @@Sam-ey1nn I wasn't referencing that somebody hasn't discussed every element on the periodic table to death three times already. I wanted to see this view or viewpoint or angle on the periodic table complete and filled out with every element where the name came from a little history.

    • @pierreplourde
      @pierreplourde Год назад +9

      I second this!

    • @sogghartha
      @sogghartha Год назад +34

      @@markmcgoveran6811 I think that goes beyond his scope, he's a words guy, not a chemistry guy

  • @gordonbrinkmann
    @gordonbrinkmann Год назад +439

    Actually, the element Tungsten is not called Wolfrahm in German, but Wolfram. And -ram in this case has nothing to do with white fluffy cream, the word rām is Middle High German meaning grime, soot or dirt because the easy to grate mineral resembles grime.

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 Год назад +25

      came here to write this, thankful you posted it already

    • @malinpetersson4182
      @malinpetersson4182 Год назад +42

      I always thought it was funny that it's called tungsten in English, a Swedish word, but in Swedish we say wolfram, like in German 😅

    • @LeSetteMelediEva
      @LeSetteMelediEva Год назад +13

      Are you saying Wolfram is not "wolf's cream" but "wolf's poo"? That's even more hilarious XD

    • @gordonbrinkmann
      @gordonbrinkmann Год назад +7

      @@LeSetteMelediEva No, I mean the black carbon powder after you burned something... not a native English speaker so I don't know how it's translated best.

    • @LeSetteMelediEva
      @LeSetteMelediEva Год назад +5

      @@gordonbrinkmann I'm not native english either, I was trying to toss a very bad pun XD XD XD XD

  • @iDontReallyKnowTbh
    @iDontReallyKnowTbh Год назад +84

    14:55 honestly the best part about tungsten is that while it is a Swedish word, the Swedish word for the element is Wolfram, while in almost every other country it’s Tungsten. Kinda funny how despite it being a Swedish word, it’s not the Swedish word for the element

    • @doommarauder3532
      @doommarauder3532 Год назад +1

      Uh.. no? At no point have I heard Tungsten been called wolfram in sweden. I've only lived here my entire life. Its tungsten.

    • @andreykarbinovskiy430
      @andreykarbinovskiy430 Год назад +13

      It's Volfram (Вольфрам) in Russian

    • @iDontReallyKnowTbh
      @iDontReallyKnowTbh Год назад

      @@doommarauder3532 check the Swedish periodic table you numbskull

    • @radixverum1940
      @radixverum1940 Год назад +22

      @@doommarauder3532 Well, I've also lived in Sweden all my life and have never heard this element called anything but volfram. If you look up "tungsten" in Swedish Wikipedia, you'll find it desribed as "an earlier name of an element - see volfram". The entry for volfram in Swedish Wikipedia starts with the description "volfram is a metallic element discovered in 1783 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele".

    • @midston5843
      @midston5843 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@radixverum1940 They don't mean it was used as the Swedish name. They mean the name derives from Swedish.

  • @Mikathedog100
    @Mikathedog100 Год назад +451

    I have a seven year old daughter who taught herself to read by the time she was three - with, quite literally, zero help from me, as she had decided that only she would be the one to read herself stories. Her love of words hasn't diminished one bit as she's grown older. So I just wanted to say, thank you Rob, for this channel and answering the plethora of "word questions" that she has. She loves these videos so much.

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 Год назад +4

      She must be getting help from somewhere. Otherwise, how would she know which sounds go with which letters?

    • @Mikathedog100
      @Mikathedog100 Год назад +26

      @@greywolf7577 she put subtitles on everything and used to fall asleep listening to anything that taught phonics.

    • @rosemorris7912
      @rosemorris7912 Год назад +1

      She is what neuorscientists and psychologists call neurotypical hyperlexic. Congratulations on having such a talented daughter!

    • @Mikathedog100
      @Mikathedog100 Год назад +1

      @@rosemorris7912 very likely a little autistic too - though incredibly fascinating 😉
      Interestingly she doesn't spell her words in writing as well as she can read them. As far as reading goes, there's not a word that's stumped her so far!

    • @melissasalasblair5273
      @melissasalasblair5273 Год назад +3

      My Dad told me when I was very, very young to become besties w/ words, and to know their duality as well, and I've been asking questions about them ever since 🌸🍓❣️😁

  • @azounx
    @azounx Год назад +458

    Sodium/Natrium is something that many of us non-native speakers of English need to remember, simply because you wouldn't expect English to use a different name that's also Latin-looking.

    • @TheRavenir
      @TheRavenir Год назад +104

      Indeed, most non-Romance languages use a variant of "Kalium" for "potassium" and a variant of "Natrium" for "sodium". That's the case in German, for example.

    • @arthur_p_dent
      @arthur_p_dent Год назад +51

      @@TheRavenir true, but oddly enough potassium carbonate ("Kaliumcarbonat") is also named "Pottasche" in German. The sound being similar to "potassium" is no coincidence.

    • @yura2424
      @yura2424 Год назад +67

      @@arthur_p_dent Potassium carbonate was originally extracted from ashes. Pot Ash
      Pot-Ash-ium

    • @arthur_p_dent
      @arthur_p_dent Год назад +21

      @@yura2424 I know. Just didn't care to dive into the details here. "potash" is also an old English word, describing the same circumstance.

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 Год назад +25

      I am lab operator. I often wondered where the names of the elements come from. Why we use in science not everywhere the same words ? It would make the chemical wolrd easier. Why Potassium in English and Kalium in German? The K is the Symbol for Kalium. Natrim Symbol Na - Sodium? Confusing.

  • @JayForeman
    @JayForeman Год назад +428

    I bloody love this channel! Found you a few days ago and have been bingeing since. I noticed you mentioned you went to York Uni. Any chance you studied linguistics there? (If so, snap!!)

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +162

      Hi Jay! No, I didn't do linguistics, I did English, but we were there at the same time. I interviewed you a couple of times for the student radio station. I was (and remain) a fan! "Calypso, Calypso, filled with sugar and E163"

    • @marvelfan3148
      @marvelfan3148 Год назад +62

      I cannot believe this, you both went to the same uni, wowo!!!! You are both amazing, I too just discovered RobWords and am a Jay Foreman fan - best part of RUclips by far! Just starting my upcoming RobWords binge, never knew how much I needed these etymology videos 😄

    • @JayForeman
      @JayForeman Год назад +121

      @@RobWords I *KNEW* you looked familiar!! How embarrassing! 😮 In my defence, it’s been nearly 20 years. Hope all’s well with you!

    • @h60memo
      @h60memo Год назад +6

      I noticed this channel pop up in my recommendeds the other day as well. Good stuff!

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +81

      You're entirely forgiven. Lovely to hear from you now!

  • @luketolley5734
    @luketolley5734 Год назад +140

    Another reason behind the name of tantalum is that it's very resistant to being dissolved in acids. Just like Tantalus was in water but couldn't interact with it, tantalum can be in acid and not interact with it.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад +8

      I designed some acid tanks for a plating company and having worked my way through college as a welder I tig welded the tantalum tanks using sheared strips of the metal as filler rod.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +28

      I missed this and much prefer this explanation. Thank you.

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Год назад

      interesting

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 10 месяцев назад

      @shalomshalom8715 Australia=australis=south.

  • @renaminginprogress6903
    @renaminginprogress6903 Год назад +400

    I feel it necessary to submit that I love your channel. Your video style has the perfect mix of informative and entertaining. Your dry wit and cheesy puns warm my heart and make learning fun and easy. Don't never stop stopping, Rob.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +61

      That's lovely to hear, thank you

    • @MrDavidMcNick
      @MrDavidMcNick Год назад +17

      I've spent the last few days just binging through them all. Satisfying videos and oddly addictive.

    •  Год назад +13

      I absolutely agree.

    • @samuelthecamel
      @samuelthecamel Год назад +10

      That quadruple negative makes my brain hurt. Otherwise, very wholesome

    • @paddyhalfmonkey
      @paddyhalfmonkey Год назад +2

      Well said and for me the channel is nice to watch as it's delivered in a calm way...easy to watch

  • @dumbalek6001
    @dumbalek6001 Год назад +29

    Here's an obligatory Polish comment to thank you for pointing out that Maria Skłodowska-Curie was not, in fact, French. She was essentially a refugee who fled Poland in times of Russian occupation to seek education. She was deeply patriotic (as we can see by the element she has named) and very distraught she had to leave the country.
    It's quite sad that now most of the world think she's french, because she married a French man and Polish names look too scary to pronounce for most foreigners :P To my best knowledge she insisted to keep her Polish maiden name and underlined herself that she's Polish, not French.
    There's a very interesting article about her relationship with her homeland : "Polonium, Radioactivity & Elephants:
    How Poland Shaped Maria Skłodowska-Curie
    (& How She Shaped Poland)".
    And also as far as Polish names go, this one is not that hard to pronounce! It's often just the spelling that looks hard - it's pronounced: Skwo-dov-ska.

    • @calahan59
      @calahan59 2 месяца назад

      She was french, just deal with it.... Like Chopin.

  • @ahmedlateef8669
    @ahmedlateef8669 Год назад +91

    the etymology of potassium is very interesting. potassium was known early on to alchemists for making soap, and was isolated by using wood ash aka pot ash (hence the name potassium pronounced pot-ash-ium). Kalium, the Latin name, comes from the word alkali, which comes from the Arabic scholars who worked with the element, who called it al-qalyah, which means plant ash. so the name and symbol for potassium comes from it's early use in soap making by deriving it from ashes.

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Год назад +1

      ooh, interesting

    • @w0ttheh3ll
      @w0ttheh3ll Год назад +2

      Potash is/was also used in glass making. Historically, huge amounts of hardwood trees were burnt to ash for the glass industry, including in North America and the Black Forest in Germany.

    • @melissasalasblair5273
      @melissasalasblair5273 Год назад +2

      I love alchemy in all of its forms 💭🌌❣️

    • @HappyCodingZX
      @HappyCodingZX 11 месяцев назад +1

      wow, I was taught at school that the name derived from Kali, the hindu goddess of fire, which made it my favourite. Still, the Arabic origin is equally interesting.

    • @isilder
      @isilder 6 месяцев назад

      Same with Calcium... the symbol for Calcium should be K or Ka... ??? but it got the updated symbol to go with the updated name.

  • @jonathannash8471
    @jonathannash8471 Год назад +319

    I really think you should've mentioned Oganesson especially, notable for being the only element named after someone still alive today.
    Also it, along with Seaborgium, is the only element that was named after someone who was still alive at time of naming.

    • @mister_i9245
      @mister_i9245 Год назад +36

      Arguably Gallium was named after its discoverer, though in a roundabout way. It was discovered by a guy named lecoq which is french for "the chicken" and gallium could come from gallus (latin for chicken) rather than gaul.

    • @thomasfevre9515
      @thomasfevre9515 Год назад +8

      Both worked in the teams that discovered the most recent elements. The places where they have been discovered are also immortalized as elements (one lab in California and one near moscow iirc)

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +10

      @@thomasfevre9515 Well, the Lawrencium Berkelium and Lawrencium Livermorium National Laboratories in Californium, United States of Americium are involved in the names of multiple elements. Dubnium is named after the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna which is, as you say, near Moscow.

    • @thomasfevre9515
      @thomasfevre9515 Год назад +3

      @@beeble2003 thank you, i remembered californium and moscovium but the rest eluded me.

    • @theoldengineer1946
      @theoldengineer1946 Год назад +16

      @@beeble2003 Glenn T. Seaborg could be contacted using an address consisting entirely of elements: Seaborgium, Lawrencium, Berkelium, Californium, Americium

  • @norweedrecords
    @norweedrecords Год назад +184

    3:50 in Polish (my mother tongue) "aluminium" is a word for technically clean, extracted aluminum, with 99.95 - 99.955% of the chemical element. and the chemical element itself, in Polish is called "glin" (pronounced "gleen"). so "glin" is the theoretical term for the element, and "aluminium" is a practical term for the closest substance you can get to the chemical element.

    • @yura2424
      @yura2424 Год назад +28

      "Glin" sounds like it came from the word "Glina" = "clay"
      Aluminum is made from clay. Pure clay is Al2O3

    • @norweedrecords
      @norweedrecords Год назад +9

      you both are right, I was actually using Wikipedia as my reference for the technical meaning of the word "aluminium", but in everyday life they can be synonyms. and in Polish schools, I can tell, they rather call the chemical element "glin" than "aluminium".

    • @slowanddeliberate6893
      @slowanddeliberate6893 Год назад +5

      Bauxite

    • @errorist68
      @errorist68 Год назад +2

      ​@@yura2424ancient Greek, άργυρος (árgiros) = silver, άργυλος (argylos) = clay. Can't be a coincidence

    • @Laelilu
      @Laelilu Год назад +7

      ​@@yura2424 nah... Aluminium is mainly made out of bauxite, the main aluminium ore. It is more like a hard rock. There may be a lot of clay-minerals which contain aluminum but not every clay is aluminum enriched. Trust me. I'm geologist.

  • @Chrischi3TutorialLPs
    @Chrischi3TutorialLPs 11 месяцев назад +13

    Here's an interesting fact about Cobalt:
    The miners who mined it thought that the cobalt was cursed by, well, kobolds. However, kobolds weren't completely malevolent creatures, either. It is said that, if you left them offerings, they would actually protect you by knocking on the walls of the mineshafts from the other side if the shaft was about to collapse. The origin of this superstition is thought to be the fact that certain types of rock, when under enough strain (such as they might experience during an impending cave in), would give off a distinctive knocking sound, which the miners learned to recognize as a sign of danger.

  • @Wizard0fDogs
    @Wizard0fDogs 11 месяцев назад +11

    8:55 Ah! Ytterby jumpscare in the middle of taking about Tantalum

  • @DominoIdiot
    @DominoIdiot Год назад +46

    I actually live in Ytterby and I could see my house on Google in your video. Everyone on the island of Resarö is well aware of the significance of the mine and the elements that was discovered here.

    • @perjohanaxell9862
      @perjohanaxell9862 11 месяцев назад +3

      It's actually quite cool that little Sweden has so many elements discovered here.

  • @mokuRat
    @mokuRat Год назад +96

    10:25 Nihonium is also named after Japan! Nihon (or Nippon) is the actual Japanese name for the country

    • @wladjarosz345
      @wladjarosz345 Год назад +6

      and he forgot as well another old country en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruthenia

    • @nanamacapagal8342
      @nanamacapagal8342 Месяц назад

      Let's not forget Livermorium either, named after Livermore, California

  • @pyglik2296
    @pyglik2296 Год назад +75

    When I learned chemistry in middle school and had to remember the symbols for the elements, I looked into how they are called in latin to help me remember why it's Ag, Au, Fe or Cu.
    Also, in Polish, the oxygen has an interesting name of "tlen". It comes from the word "tlić" (smolder), because it is needed to burn. Before the mid 19-th century thogh, it was called "kwasoród", which is a direct translation from latin.

    • @teolinek
      @teolinek Год назад +12

      In Czech, oxygen is called "kyslík (compare with the Polish word "kiszony," meaning "pickled" or "sour").

    • @achtsekundenfurz7876
      @achtsekundenfurz7876 Год назад +10

      100% agree, Poland has the most polish(ed) language. English should follow suit and call oxygen "burnium."

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 Год назад +3

      My high school chemistry teacher says that the way you remember the symbol for silver and gold is to think that if you get your silver stolen, you say "aww gee" (AG) and if you get your gold stolen, you chase after the person and say "Hey you!" (AU).

  • @errorist68
    @errorist68 Год назад +20

    Silver as an element got its current name from the Indo-European root "arg-u-ro" (= shiny metal) and is related to the Sanskrit word arj-una (= light, luminous). In addition to άργυρος (árgiros) in Greek, this same Indo-European root also passed into Latin, the word argentum, which in turn passed down to the rest of the Latin languages (argent in French meaning both silver and money, and argento in Italian).
    Similarly to Argentina having received its name from the Latin argentum, Arizona also got its name from the Aztec ariziuma, also meaning silver.

  • @zanedobler
    @zanedobler Год назад +6

    The gold jumpscare actually hurt my entire nervous system.

  • @shangobunni5
    @shangobunni5 Год назад +106

    The amount of work that obviously goes into writing RobWords episodes is impressive. All the rhymes, puns, alliteration, references, and connections you make between words, idioms, and other expressions is just - Wow! That you can pack so much word play into one relatively short video is mind-boggling. Keep up the great work! ❤😊👍

  • @wernerfritsch6436
    @wernerfritsch6436 Год назад +88

    Beryllium is named after the mineral Beryll which was used for optical lenses. The German word "Brille" is related to that.

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +13

      Superb! Thanks for that.

    • @SteelJM1
      @SteelJM1 Год назад +2

      Hmm. Does that share any etymology with the word "Braille"?

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Год назад

      Interesting

    • @Holy_flipflops_of_Moses
      @Holy_flipflops_of_Moses Год назад +9

      @@SteelJM1 I think it comes from the name of the guy who invented it (L. Braille)

    • @SteelJM1
      @SteelJM1 Год назад +3

      @@Holy_flipflops_of_Moses Dang. Just a coincidence then.

  • @HappyCat-142
    @HappyCat-142 2 месяца назад +1

    LOVE the humour. Wish he started with Mendelevium as the discoverer of the table, and mentioned the latin names for Sn, K, Fe

  • @AndrasBalintBoroczky
    @AndrasBalintBoroczky 11 месяцев назад +10

    10:24 You forgot nihonium. That name comes from Japan literally meaning Japan (nihon, 日本)

  • @cHVF
    @cHVF Год назад +50

    I can't think of many other channels that consistently deliver such a high [information/time] ratio. Thank you!

  • @weshard1
    @weshard1 Год назад +53

    Do an episode on the origin of the names of the eons, eras, periods, and epochs of the geological timescale. Many are interesting.

    • @Mercure250
      @Mercure250 Год назад +3

      Interestingly, a lot of them come from places in Wales, iirc

    • @weshard1
      @weshard1 Год назад +1

      @@Mercure250 Yes, the Silurian and Ordovician periods got their names from Celtic tribes, the Silures, and Ordovices, respectively.
      I’m a Welshman myself.

    • @weshard1
      @weshard1 Год назад +2

      @@Mercure250 And, of course, the Cambrian period, after the Cambrian mountains of Mid Wales.

    • @Mercure250
      @Mercure250 Год назад +2

      @@weshard1 Yeah, I remember looking these up and I was surprised that so many of them were straight up named after random places around the world, and I had some "Oh of course!" moments with some of them (notably, Devonian, Jurassic, and Permian)

    • @eVill420
      @eVill420 6 месяцев назад

      ​​@@Mercure250they really just wanted to represent Wales there 😂
      I love how I didn't connect the dots when I was Learning about Welsh kingdoms 🤣😭

  • @ltsiros
    @ltsiros 27 дней назад +1

    Happy to see you mentioned Argentina when talking about Silver. Thanks!

  • @bobbuethe1477
    @bobbuethe1477 11 месяцев назад +2

    Trivia factoid: In Edgar Rice Burroughs' "John Carter of Mars" stories, the capitol city of Mars (or Barsoom, as the natives called it) was named Helium. In creating Superman, Jerome Siegel took some inspiration from John Carter, who was an Earthman who had superior strength and could leap great distances due to the lesser gravity of Mars. As a wink to ENB readers, Siegel named Superman's home planet after a different noble gas, Krypton.
    (Source: former Superman editor Julius Schwartz.)

  • @globingoblin
    @globingoblin Год назад +65

    5:56 Argentina (and the masculine form argentino) can actually be used as adjectives in Spanish to refer to something made of silver! Something similar happens with aurum, we have áureo and áurea

    • @lofdan
      @lofdan Год назад +3

      De aurum proviene directamente oro, áureo es una palabra tomada. En español antiguo también existió "ariento", heredada del latín argentum. De hecho, en el reino de Castilla hubo una moneda llamada arienzo < ARGENTEUM, literalmente "la de plata".

    • @frankstrawnation
      @frankstrawnation Год назад +4

      For example, "the golden ratio" is "la proporción áurea".

    • @nnirr1
      @nnirr1 Год назад

      Is Aurum related to the word Aura?

    • @qugart.
      @qugart. Год назад

      @@nnirr1 Huh....I kinda tracked it back a bit. Aura is derived from the greek αὔρα which means a breeze, cool air in motion.
      Whereas aurum derrives from the earlier latin form ausum. And that came from the also latin word audeo meaning "I dare". And that came from the proto-Italic awidēō meaning "wanting much" or greed. There is also the latin word avidus.
      So no, no relation I guess. The one is a small breeze, the other one greed.

    • @neekk040
      @neekk040 Год назад

      huh i thought argentino was an adjective to refer to a man with a large nose ;)

  • @1zaj34
    @1zaj34 Год назад +43

    With each new video, I'm becoming more and more of a fan. Great work. 🤗
    I have the feeling, that one element, although appearing in a list at 14:06, should have gotten a mention of its own.
    Mendelevium is named after the guy, who came up with the periodic table in the 1st place.

  • @matthewrippingsby5384
    @matthewrippingsby5384 3 месяца назад +1

    These are some of the most consistently enjoyable and professional vids on any subject on RUclips, Rob: thanks!

  • @trynyoutube
    @trynyoutube Год назад +1

    RUclips: RobWords: Gold! Singer: Go-- (Ad starts)

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Год назад +27

    Vanadium is actually named after Freya’s clan of gods, the Vanir.

    • @vde1846
      @vde1846 Год назад +6

      Vanadis is the main epithet for Freya (actually Freya itself is an epithet, meaning "Lady"). A Dis is a lesser female divinity of some sort, like the ruling spirit (Rå) of a particular forest or landform, and both the Norns and the Valkyries are Disir. The title Vanadis presumably harkens back to a time when Freya and Odins wife Frigg was the same character (Frigg just means "Love," its the same "fri" as in friend, since a friend is someone who has a loving disposition towards you), and so as the lady and housekeeper of Valhalla she would be the leader of the Valkyries, hence she is the Vane who is also a Dis.

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Год назад +1

      @@vde1846 Awesome! Thank you!

  • @johnlumsden9102
    @johnlumsden9102 Год назад +22

    There is a lot of basalt rock in our area and it's called trap rock because of the difficulty of extracting the copper.

  • @Goatcha_M
    @Goatcha_M 7 месяцев назад +1

    Finishing with Wolf's Cream and a cream coloured dog is actually a pretty good bit of serendipity.

  • @retiredtom1654
    @retiredtom1654 Год назад +2

    During my high school days I didn't have a clue about the periodic table's use. After watching your short video I gained more knowledge about it than ever before. Keep up the good work by educating me and others.

  • @brucekish7576
    @brucekish7576 Год назад +10

    Beryllium (Be) and Erbium (Er), when combined, create the chemical compound "Beer."

    • @chrislove7115
      @chrislove7115 Год назад +2

      Arsenic, like nitrogen, forms aromatic 5 membered rings. For nitrogen these are called az-oles , think az from azole as per the French for Nitrogen. The Arsenic analogues take the ars- root, with the -ole suffix...

  • @historybuff7491
    @historybuff7491 Год назад +15

    Quick silver meaning liquid silver is fine. It does mean that. But in older forms of English, quick had more of an sense of living, which also applied to Murcury. When at room tempts, Murcury is liquid and silvery looking, but it will pool up and move at the slightest vibration while stil trying to stay in that pooling. It looks alive in that state.

    • @arthur_p_dent
      @arthur_p_dent Год назад +4

      Correct.
      Same in German btw, where the name of the element is "Quecksilber". The word "queck" or "quick" no longer exists in modern German, but there does exist the adjective "quicklebendig". "lebendig" means "alive" and "quicklebendig" is basically the same, only with greater emphasis.
      Of course, we also have the old meaning of "quick" = "alive" in German "erquicken" and English "quicken" (as in religious talk like "he quickens my soul".)

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +3

      True, hence the word “quickening” and the quick of the nail.

    • @paulmay396
      @paulmay396 Год назад +2

      @@ferretyluv and also quicklime and the movie 'The Quick and the Dead'

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Год назад +2

      In Finnish it is "elohopea" (living sliver). In Estonian it is "elavhõbe"

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +3

      @@paulmay396 The phrase "the quick and the dead" dates back to Tyndale's English translation of the Bible in the 1500s...

  • @EmpoerterGeisterfahrer
    @EmpoerterGeisterfahrer 6 месяцев назад

    Rob Deine Videos sind wirklich eine perfekte Mischung aus unterhaltsam und lehrreich, und die Produktionsqualität ist auch noch top notch.

  • @kill3stdayz910
    @kill3stdayz910 11 месяцев назад +3

    Funny you mentioned Boron at the end. Watching Chernobyl series, one of the main elements used to slow down the runaway reaction was boron poured over the top of the open reactor!

  • @rawbhonn7715
    @rawbhonn7715 Год назад +22

    I find Rob’s videos both informative and entertaining and I’m glad to have found this channel. I’ve appreciated the study of etymology for a number of years as a hobby not academically.

  • @GalileosTelescope
    @GalileosTelescope Год назад +13

    You missed the opportunity to include Arabic etymologies. I believe the K of potassium comes from the Arabic word potash: kali. Which is also from where we get alkali. Also boron comes from Arabic and the old word for nitrogen azote (still used in some languages like French).

  • @undyingbutterfly6087
    @undyingbutterfly6087 Месяц назад

    LOVE the additional information you gave

  • @longhohoang2222
    @longhohoang2222 9 месяцев назад

    I just love how you switch between the elements so seamlessly

  • @christ2381
    @christ2381 Год назад +25

    Again very interesting! I read that Wolfram derives from "ram" which means "soot" because the mineral easily breaks into a black powder. This mineral was a problem in tin extraction because it "ate" the ore like a wolf eats sheep. The latin word is lupi spuma = wolf's foam.

  • @BlameThande
    @BlameThande Год назад +8

    I'm a chemist and this is a fascinating topic. It's interesting to think that if things had gone a little differently, we could be talking about aquaform and muriatine instead of hydrogen and chlorine.

  • @AnnoyedSonic
    @AnnoyedSonic Год назад +2

    7:40 Dude literally does a stitch impression and that made me laugh so hard

  • @winfriedtheis5767
    @winfriedtheis5767 6 месяцев назад

    Definitely a particularly well polished gem amongst your videos! ❤

  • @joegrey9807
    @joegrey9807 Год назад +14

    Another chemical 'gen' word is halogen ('salt maker') which refers to the Group 7 elements of the periodic table: fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine and astatine.

    • @patrickmurphy3048
      @patrickmurphy3048 Год назад +2

      Aren't those all names for girls in the southern states of the USA

    • @ghoust592
      @ghoust592 3 месяца назад

      its group 17th, also halogens are the most electronegative elements, that's why their salts are very stable

  • @Primitarian
    @Primitarian Год назад +8

    There was a joke during the 1950s that one particular research facility was creating so many new elements that they would appear as follows in the Periodic Table: Universitium, Ofium, Californium, Berkelium

  • @AnnabelleBeaudoin
    @AnnabelleBeaudoin Год назад +1

    Such a great video as always ❤

  • @JCtheMusicMan_
    @JCtheMusicMan_ 11 месяцев назад

    The RUclips algorithm introduced your content to me several times and it usually knows what I might be interested in so I gave it a go. I am delighted to have found a kindred curious spirit who has the knowledge and history of how languages and phrases came to be. Excellent presentations!

  • @chicagotypewriter2094
    @chicagotypewriter2094 Год назад +9

    I’ve browsed the Royal Institute of Chemistry’s Periodic Table so I knew a bunch of these, but this video was fantastic!
    Love the classic British humor, would love to see all of the Table covered!

  • @paulkinzer7661
    @paulkinzer7661 Год назад +17

    This was a great one! I knew lots of these, since they're fairly obvious, but that has always made me wonder about those that were not so obvious. Having you fill in lots of gaps in the fun way you always do was a treat.

  • @LotsOfS
    @LotsOfS Год назад +8

    Great video! I wouldn't mind a part 2 of this, where you explain the names of iron, tin, and lead, and not just their chemical symbols. Same for Arsenic and Sulfur, which you mentioned but did not actually talk about. Other elements I don't recall seeing are Phosphor, Silicon, and Calcium, which I think would all be interesting. Also why do the nobel gasses tend to end in -on instead of -um? So many questions still. Love the fact that Gold just means Yellow though

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 10 месяцев назад

      "on" is common for non-metals other than halogens: also Carbon, Boron and Silicon. Ramsey, who named them, used Greek words to name the noble gases, which is where the "on" came from. Helium is an exception since nobody knew it was a gas when it was discovered via the Sun's spectrum. Bismuth, arsenic and antimony were named before the convention, and nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen by another system by Lavoisier.

  • @rodbowden9086
    @rodbowden9086 Год назад +1

    Brilliant! In fact all your videos are of the highest quality, educational and always highly entertaining. Love your application to your craft!

  • @tauriusmagnamus3281
    @tauriusmagnamus3281 Год назад +7

    In the medical field, -ium is translated as "stuff". 'pericardium' : stuff around heart. Latin is just simple words that sound exotic when put together. :P

    • @alias1129
      @alias1129 Год назад +1

      Actual translation from Greek: "peri" (anc. Greek=surrounding) + "card" (kardia/cardia=heart) + ium suffix.
      Altogether pericardium = tissue/layer surrounding the heart.
      Same goes for epicardium from anc. Greek. "epi" meaning on top of/nearby, myocardium from anc. Greek "mys"/"myo" referring to muscle and finally endocardium again from anc. Greek, "endo" (innermost/inside).

  • @tinyhammertoksvig8218
    @tinyhammertoksvig8218 Год назад +11

    Funny thing is, Tungsten isnt even called that in Swedish. Its called Wolfram.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Год назад +2

      Actually Volfram.Tungsten was the rock from which it was extracted. Remember metals generally do not exist in pure form but as oxides.

  • @kjc2987
    @kjc2987 Год назад +1

    This was such a good video! I watched it myself and then we watched it again as a family. I knew some of these but it’s so fun how you can always learn new things hiding in language. Always love seeing a new video pop up from this channel

  • @smk9320
    @smk9320 Год назад +1

    You've made the periodic table a lot more fun!

  •  Год назад +21

    The topic has bothered me for years. In German, sodium and potassium are called "Natrium" and "Kalium" like in the original Latin words and not like the English counterpart. That's why the symbols Na and K happen to fit with German names. That's why I thought the two elements had German origins at school. The element bismuth is also called "Wismut" in German. Wismut is a former East German mining company that mined uranium for the USSR. So it has nothing to do with the element "bismuth". At school I also always thought that the company was mining bismuth.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 Год назад +2

      There is no original Latin name. Potassium was first extracted by Humphrey Davy in 1807 and he named it Potassium. However, ten years earlier Martin Heinrich Klaproth had found that there is some new element and he suggested "kali" as a name for it from "alkali" which is Arabic origin. However, they both come from ash. Potassium from pot ashes (potash) and alkali from plant ashes.
      From Wikipedia: "Kalium (lateinisch, aus arabisch القلية, DMG al-qalya ‚Pflanzenasche‘) ist ein chemisches Element mit dem Elementsymbol K (früher vereinzelt auch Ka) und der Ordnungszahl 19. "

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад +1

      @@okaro6595 Yes, something as reactive as sodium or potassium could never have been known in Roman times.

    • @AelwynMr
      @AelwynMr Год назад +2

      ​​​@@okaro6595 Yep! Al-qali means the ashes you get from burning saltwort, a common weed in Mediterranean beaches. This ash contains a lot of sodium and potassium carbonate and was cooked with oil to make soap. Two species of saltwort have the scientific names _Salsola soda_ and Salsola kali, names linked to "sodium" and "kalium"

    • @eefaaf
      @eefaaf Год назад +1

      We use Natrium and Kalium as well in Dutch. Though there do exist outdated names Potas and Soda,as in 'dubbel koolzure soda', that is baking soda, sodium-bicarbonaat.

    • @todortodorov940
      @todortodorov940 Год назад +2

      Potassium actually comes from *potash* itself from old Dutch / Germanic *potaschen* which was used back in the day to extract Kalium containing salts.

  • @jasonjohnson4803
    @jasonjohnson4803 Год назад +1

    As always, educational and informative, with the right amount of humor and wit. Love your channel! ❤

  • @robertl6442
    @robertl6442 Год назад

    Your videos are great - just subscribed! Please keep them coming.

  • @RoiHelektron
    @RoiHelektron Год назад +8

    As a Greek, I can truly say that all information related to the Greek language is 100% accurate. Thank you for respecting our (ancestors') language. I Love your channel!

    • @billy2182
      @billy2182 Год назад +1

      Every word comes from the original Greek! (My Big Fat Greek Wedding) lol

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад +1

      Was Michael Flanders correct about _xenos_ being the word for guest as well as stranger?

  • @Ruhrpottpatriot
    @Ruhrpottpatriot Год назад +30

    Since you already mentioned "Wasserstoff" for Hydrogen: Oxygen is called "Sauerstoff" in German, sauer translates to sour, or... acid/acidic. An acid is called "Säure" and belongs to the same word family as sauer.
    /edit: Wolfram is not quite correct. The "Wolf" part comes from the fact that when the element was discovered in the 16th century, it "ate tin like a wolf". The "ram" part comes from middle high German "rām". This word is the origin for the modern word "Rahm", but it also means "ruß" or soot. Why is this important? Well, because if you take Wolframit [(Fe,Mn)WO4] you can very easily grind it into black powder. So Tungsten is an element that eats tin and looks like your chimney after you put in damp wood.
    P.S. On that note: Tungsten didn't actually describe the element back when English, French and Italian introduced that word and took it from Swedish (as described in the video), the element they were referring to was calcium tungstate and the swedes called the same element "volfram".

    • @Teri_Berk
      @Teri_Berk Год назад +1

      The 3rd element with that ending "stoff" is the Stickstoff in German. Though I can't figure out what "Stick" stands for.

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot Год назад +3

      @@Teri_Berk "Stick" comes from "ersticken", which translates to "suffocate", but the meaning is rather "doesn't support life" or "suffocates life".
      That's why the earliest French name was "azôte", an almost direct translation of "ersticken".
      The English Name Nitrogen is loaned from the French "nitrogène", taken from Latin "nitrogenium", which in turn comes from Greek "nítron", which describes a brine and was chosen after it was discovered that saltpetre/nitre and nitric acid are nitrogen compounds (which is also the reason why early names for nitrogen were "Salpeterbildner" or "saltpetre maker")

    • @Teri_Berk
      @Teri_Berk Год назад

      @@Ruhrpottpatriot I wouldn't really guess that "Stick" would have something to do with suffocation. The word azôte sounds like something which could be deadly. If you only change the z with t and it becomes atôte and that suddenly looks like töten which means to kill in German.

    • @ScheissPunk
      @ScheissPunk 11 месяцев назад

      I would guess that "ersticken" has the root "stecken" which can mean "tuck in" but also "stick" and is also used as "plug in" in "einstecken". I think they might have the same origin?

    • @Ruhrpottpatriot
      @Ruhrpottpatriot 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ScheissPunk Ersticken comes from old high German irsticken, while stecken comes from old high german stecken (yes, it didn't change).

  • @paulapaula0808
    @paulapaula0808 Год назад

    One of the best channels I've found. I hope you will continue!

  • @vidyashankar9616
    @vidyashankar9616 Год назад

    Thanks for the interesting and informative video. It reminded me of the periodic table, symbols for elements and the like, which I studied in my chemistry class quite a few years ago.

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Год назад +6

    In which we find out that the names of elements really aren't always elementary, and that tungsten's symbol has maybe the most bizarre origin of the lot. It was a delight to enjoy this hopscotch journey through the table periodic!

  • @rikardottosson1272
    @rikardottosson1272 Год назад +4

    I like it that Tungsten is etymologically Swedish but we generally use wolfram still.
    Also the main incandescent lightbulb brand was Osram (for Osmium + Wolfram I think) with knock-off brand Tungsram going all-wolfram. I mean tungsten.

  • @HattmannenNilsson
    @HattmannenNilsson Год назад +5

    Interestingly, while you English speakers go around calling it a heavy stone in Swedish, we Swedes do not call it Tungsten, but instead Volfram.
    As a side note, Boron is, in spite of its name, actually a quite interesting element.

    • @okaro6595
      @okaro6595 2 месяца назад

      Boron is Borium in Latin. It is easy to confuse it with Bohrium.

  • @RingJando
    @RingJando 2 месяца назад

    You are the most organized and lucid moderator/educator that I have come across - Ta

  • @jolenethiessen357
    @jolenethiessen357 Год назад +9

    My first language is English but I was educated in French. Many of the "weird" symbols make perfect sense in French due to it's relationship to Latin! It wasn't until I was much older I noticed the incongruity. 😁

  • @driesvanheeswijk1633
    @driesvanheeswijk1633 Год назад +4

    You always look so fresh in your videos, wow. Thanks for all of the great content, keep it up!

  • @unclecreepy4185
    @unclecreepy4185 Год назад +2

    One of my favorite elements is “Bromine” which gets its name from the Latin word “bromos” meaning stench.
    Hydrogenated vegetable oil (or partially hydrogenated) is when you add hydrogen to vegetable oil to make a liquid oil solid and spreadable.
    Mountain Dew use to add “Brominated vegetable oil” in their drink (so did other citrus based drinks, many off brands still use it). Which is when you add bromine to vegetable oil. Mountain Dew stopped using it in 2020.

  • @rachelbroughton6457
    @rachelbroughton6457 Год назад

    Love these videos! They are always so full of interesting little stories and humour, they’re just great!

  • @TheOneSin7
    @TheOneSin7 Год назад +5

    Thank you, as always, for the video!
    Little correction on Wolfram though, the rām has more of the meaning of soot or crud, because it can easily be ground and was blackish, like coal soot.
    The first name it got was indeed wolf cream, lupi spuma.

  • @alexoakley226
    @alexoakley226 Год назад +5

    As a chemistry student and a linguistics enthusiast, this is the perfect video. Please do all elements!

    • @Ostralucia
      @Ostralucia Год назад +3

      As a fellow linguistics enthusiast and chemistry student, yes we need all the elements

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Год назад

      yes

  • @AldrinAlbano
    @AldrinAlbano 9 месяцев назад

    I always learn something new with Rob every video

  • @MichaelCarter-xo2qs
    @MichaelCarter-xo2qs 10 месяцев назад

    Wow! Thank you! So very informative❤

  • @diegoreckholder945
    @diegoreckholder945 Год назад +4

    wolf's cream... and a dog makes a cameo 😆

  • @ericvaninwegen6384
    @ericvaninwegen6384 Год назад +7

    Fascinating! I have a background in Chemistry, but I didn't know all their etymologies. Great video!

  • @sarahnicholetts5655
    @sarahnicholetts5655 7 месяцев назад

    Wow! Thank you so much for this, it has made my understanding of the periodic table so much better

  • @Hiznogood
    @Hiznogood 11 месяцев назад +1

    6:47 Still called Kvicksilver here in Sweden. The only Mercury we know here is either the fabulous singer or the outboard engine.😉

  • @Reconbox1001
    @Reconbox1001 Год назад +4

    I appreciate every minute of work you put into these videos you make. Thank you for making them and sharing the knowledge 😊

  • @father_flair
    @father_flair Год назад +3

    You didn't have to to end on wolf's cream 🙈
    I wasn't convinced that the -ram suffix comes from present-day "Rahm" because the affects pronounciation (and also because German does not just , you know, lose things).
    According to Wikipedia the two words come from the same Middle High German root, namely rām, which can mean "cream", but in this case means "soot" or "dirt" because tungsten can be ground into powder easily.
    As a side note: I was allowed a special periodic table with the element names on it during my exchange year in South Africa after convining the science teacher that it was unfair.

    • @mellertid
      @mellertid Год назад +1

      I have gathered that it refers to wolfs froth, allegedly some stage in purification was foamy.

    • @father_flair
      @father_flair Год назад +2

      @@mellertid, yes I saw that too but it doesn't really make sense etymologically because the German word for "froth(ing) at the mouth" would be "Schaum"/"schäumen" (which share a root with English "scum"). When checking some more sources, I found out that "Rahm" does not actually come from the same root as "-ram". So this has all been very interesting and insightful 🤗

  • @Nikioko
    @Nikioko Год назад +3

    10:12: Selenium get its name from the moon, and Tellurium, which is just under Selenium in the Periodic Table, from the earth. And Cerium is named after Ceres.

  • @jazzmusician46
    @jazzmusician46 Год назад

    Thanks for all the research you put into your videos. I’ve watched many and really enjoy learning about the origin of our language. Thank you!

  • @idaornstein1305
    @idaornstein1305 Год назад +6

    Rob, mate you are bloody brilliant. More of this please. As I have lived in Athens Greece and have found Greek being a most fascinating language and for an English speaker was challenging to get a handle on. Greek words or roots of this wonderfully rich language is everywhere in other languages. Most of not all medical terms are Greek I believe.

  • @sdega315
    @sdega315 Год назад +4

    A different twist for a great channel! As a science teacher, I want to acknowledge how awesome is the research you put into this video!! No small task to be sure.

  • @JohnCorrUK
    @JohnCorrUK 3 месяца назад

    Superb video, informative and entertaining ❤

  • @tuhmater2985
    @tuhmater2985 Год назад +4

    Some other location-based elements are Ruthenium, named after Ruthenia, the Latin word for Russia, and Rhenium, named after Rhenus, the Latin name for the Rhine River.

    • @Wyraxx
      @Wyraxx Год назад

      Ruthenia it’s latin name of Kingdom of Rus (not Russia): en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Galicia%E2%80%93Volhynia

  • @danielterrazas
    @danielterrazas Год назад +7

    Being a follower for a while now, seeing you as a presenter at DW was a pleasant surprise. I love all your content Rob.

    • @shangobunni5
      @shangobunni5 Год назад

      A presenter at DW? Would you mind sharing more about that? I’d like to see if I can look it up.

    • @VolkerBruggemann
      @VolkerBruggemann Год назад +1

      @@shangobunni5 Example: ruclips.net/video/a5qt5fFOJl0/видео.html

    • @shangobunni5
      @shangobunni5 Год назад

      @@VolkerBruggemann Vielen Dank! I was going to ask if DW was Deutsche Welle, but I assumed in your comment it must have referred to something else that was more related to languages or etymology. I love DW! Thanks again for the link. Will definitely watch!

    • @danielterrazas
      @danielterrazas Год назад

      @@shangobunni5 I stumbled upon that Rob is an anchor at Deutsche Welle's news. That explains why he mostly records from Germany. You can follow the DW channel here on RUclips and with luck, you'll see him.

    • @shangobunni5
      @shangobunni5 Год назад

      @@danielterrazas Thanks, in fact I do already follow DW (they have the best documentaries), but I had never seen Rob anchoring before. It was a treat - I’m a big fan of Ron’s work. 😊

  • @azounx
    @azounx Год назад +8

    The River Plate is also named for silver.

    • @_Diana_S
      @_Diana_S Год назад

      La Plata

    • @Enyavar1
      @Enyavar1 Год назад +1

      Is the "River Plate" the Rio de la Plata in Argentina? Then yes.

  • @janAlekantuwa
    @janAlekantuwa Год назад

    I absolutely love your videos!
    I think it could be cool if you did a video explaining the origins of our names for musical instruments (piano, tuba, oboe, violin, etc.) as well as the origins of the voice part names (soprano, alto, tenor, baritone, bass)

    • @Lily-Bravo
      @Lily-Bravo Год назад

      That would be cool! I know one; lute and oud.

  • @clareomarfran
    @clareomarfran Год назад

    Great program. Also enjoyed the duck bobbing for food behind you and the dog who checked in.

  • @laurencefraser
    @laurencefraser Год назад +7

    While that um/ium in English (and other modern languages) does just mean 'element', my understanding is that it comes from the number of elements whose original common name was '(metal/stone/substance) from (place)', where (place) was the town or city that was the most well known source of the substance at the time. This was then rendered in Latin (that being the 'common tongue' of the scientific community), if it wasn't Latin already, resulting in a rather massive portion of the elements on the periodic table having that ending, and thus it being used by analogy for most newly discovered elements, even when they Weren't named for places.

    • @duckpotat9818
      @duckpotat9818 Год назад +1

      Partially correct.
      Now the convention is
      -um suffix is for metals like Titanium, Kalium, Ferrum, and Semi metals like Germanium etc.
      Yes, Helium is not a metal but we didn't know at the time.
      -ine suffix is for Halogens - Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine etc.
      -on suffix is for Noble gases - Neon, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Radon, and Oganesson.
      Also used in nonmetal solids like Boron, Carbon, and Silicon.

  • @rowinder
    @rowinder Год назад +5

    This was informative and I quite enjoyed it. Keep up the good work 👏

    • @RobWords
      @RobWords  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much, Rowinder!

  • @cubecraft2198
    @cubecraft2198 Год назад +1

    I know Latin, and in Latin, the nominative case for 'gold' is Aurus, and throughout translation, the nominative is usually the one translated when describing nouns without actions, 'Aurum' would be the noun of gold recieving the action/verb, example, Discipulus amat aurum, (which means 'the student loves the gold'. but that could be a cause of gold being described instead of having its own actions (usually). This goes with most Latin nouns. So the other elements that have Latin roots would also be affected.

  • @w0ttheh3ll
    @w0ttheh3ll Год назад +3

    Helium ends with "um" because the discoverers expected it to be a metal like most elements are (they didn't have a physical sample of the stuff since they discovered it by analysing sunlight). Note that all the other noble gas names end with "on".

    • @williambavington5392
      @williambavington5392 23 дня назад

      Correct. Specifically, they analyzed the solar spectrum with a spectroscope and found spectral lines that did not match any known element so determined there was a new previously unknown element. It was some years before trace amounts of a gas with the same spectral lines were found emanating from a sample of a uranium ore, formed from radioactive decay.

  • @o_s-24
    @o_s-24 Год назад +5

    Knowing Russian helped a lot with the elements with "strange" symbols. In Russian many names are still kept close to Latin like Kaliy (K) and Natriy (Na)

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад

      Note that kalium and natrium aren't Latin names -- potassium and sodium are far too reactive to have been discovered in Roman times.

    • @o_s-24
      @o_s-24 Год назад

      @beeble2003 thanks for pointing that out. Na does come from Latin, but K comes from German/Arabic