Meaning of elements' names
|
Element
|
Water-producing (Greek)
|
Hydrogen
|
Sun (Greek)
|
Helium
|
New (Greek)
|
Neon
|
Lazy (Greek)
|
Argon
|
Hidden one (Greek)
|
Krypton
|
Stranger (Greek)
|
Xenon
|
Radiation (Latin)
|
Radon
|
Stone (Greek)
|
Lithium
|
Headache (Arabic) / Salt from dry lake beds (Ancient Egyptian)
|
Sodium / Natrium
|
Plant ashes (English) / Plant ashes (Arabic)
|
Potassium / Kalium
|
Deep red (Latin)
|
Rubidium
|
Sky blue (Latin)
|
Caesium
|
France (French)
|
Francium
|
Pale (Greek)
|
Beryllium
|
Magnesia (region in Greece)
|
Magnesium
|
Lime from limestone (Latin)
|
Calcium
|
Strontian (village in Scotland)
|
Strontium
|
Heavy (Greek)
|
Barium
|
Ray (Latin)
|
Radium
|
To flow (Latin)
|
Fluorine
|
Green-Yellow (Greek)
|
Chlorine
|
Stench (Greek)
|
Bromine
|
Violet (Greek)
|
Iodine
|
Unstable (Greek)
|
Astatine
|
Coal (Latin)
|
Carbon
|
To choke (Greek)
|
Nitrogen
|
Acid-producing (Greek)
|
Oxygen
|
The Morning Star/Bringer of Light (Greek)
|
Phosphorus
|
Sulphurium (Latin) aka brimstone
|
Sulfur
|
Moon (Greek)
|
Selenium
|
White (Arabic)
|
Boron
|
Flint (Latin)
|
Silicon
|
Germania (Latin name for Germany in Antiquity)
|
Germanium
|
Yellow pigment (Greek)
|
Arsenic
|
Not alone (Greek) [Stibium in Latin]
|
Antimony
|
Earth (Latin)
|
Tellurium
|
Poland (Latin)
|
Polonium
|
Bitter salt (Latin)
|
Aluminium
|
Gallia (Latin name for France in Antiquity, i.e. Gaul)
|
Gallium
|
Indigo (Latin)
|
Indium
|
Green twig (Greek)
|
Thallium
|
Tin-om (Proto-Germanic) [Stannum in Latin]
|
Tin
|
Lauda (Proto-Germanic) [Plumbum in Latin]
|
Lead
|
White mass (German)
|
Bismuth
|
Scandinavia
|
Scandium
|
Ytterby (village outside Stockholm; element 39)
|
Yttrium
|
Titans (Greek mythology)
|
Titanium
|
Gold-colored (Persian)
|
Zirconium
|
Copenhagen (Latin)
|
Hafnium
|
Vanadis (another name for Norse goddess Freyja)
|
Vanadium
|
Niobe (Greek mythology)
|
Niobium
|
Tantalus (Greek mythology)
|
Tantalum
|
Color (Greek)
|
Chromium
|
Lead (Greek)
|
Molybdenum
|
Heavy stone (Swedish) / Wolf's froth (German)
|
Tungsten / Wolfram
|
Magnesia (region in Greece)
|
Manganese
|
Artificial (Greek)
|
Technetium
|
The Rhine (Latin)
|
Rhenium
|
Isarnan (Proto-Germanic) [Ferrum in Latin]
|
Iron
|
Russia (Latin)
|
Ruthenium
|
Smell (Greek)
|
Osmium
|
Goblin (German)
|
Cobalt
|
Rose (Greek)
|
Rhodium
|
Iris (Greek goddess of the rainbow)
|
Iridium
|
Mountain sprite, similar to goblin (German)
|
Nickel
|
Pallas Athena (Greek goddess)
|
Palladium
|
Little silver (Spanish)
|
Platinum
|
From Cyprus (Latin)
|
Copper
|
Shiny white, silubra (Proto-Germanic) [Argentum in Latin]
|
Silver
|
To shine, gultha (Proto-Germanic) [Aurum in Latin]
|
Gold
|
Jagged or teeth-like (German)
|
Zinc
|
Cadmus (Greek mythology)
|
Cadmium
|
Mercurius (Roman god) [Hydrargyrum (water-silver) in Latin]
|
Mercury
|
To lie hidden (Greek)
|
Lanthanum
|
Ceres (Roman goddess of agriculture)
|
Cerium
|
Green twin (Greek)
|
Praseodymium
|
New twin (Greek)
|
Neodymium
|
Prometheus (Greek mythology)
|
Promethium
|
Mineral samarskite named after Russian colonel Samarsky
|
Samarium
|
Europe (also a woman from Greek mythology)
|
Europium
|
Johan Gadolin
|
Gadolinium
|
Ytterby (village outside Stockholm; element 65)
|
Terbium
|
Hard to obtain (Greek)
|
Dysprosium
|
Stockholm (Latin)
|
Holmium
|
Ytterby (village outside Stockholm; element 68)
|
Erbium
|
Thule (mythological name for Scandinavia in Greek and Latin)
|
Thulium
|
Ytterby (village outside Stockholm; element 70)
|
Ytterbium
|
Paris (Latin)
|
Lutetium
|
Ray (Greek)
|
Actinium
|
Thor (Norse god)
|
Thorium
|
Before ray (Greek)
|
Protactinium
|
The planet Uranus (also Greek god of the sky, grandfather of Zeus)
|
Uranium
|
The planet Neptune (also Roman god of the sea)
|
Neptunium
|
The planet Pluto (also Roman god of the underworld)
|
Plutonium
|
America (i.e. the USA)
|
Americium
|
Marie Curie
|
Curium
|
Berkeley (city outside San Francisco and location of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
|
Berkelium
|
California (US state)
|
Californium
|
Albert Einstein
|
Einsteinium
|
Enrico Fermi
|
Fermium
|
Dmitri Mendeleev
|
Mendelevium
|
Alfred Nobel
|
Nobelium
|
Ernest Lawrence
|
Lawrencium
|
Ernest Rutherford
|
Rutherfordium
|
Dubna (city outside Moscow and location of Joint Institute for Nuclear Research)
|
Dubnium
|
Glenn Seaborg
|
Seaborgium
|
Niels Bohr
|
Bohrium
|
Hessen (German state)
|
Hassium
|
Lise Meitner
|
Meitnerium
|
Darmstadt (German city and location of GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research)
|
Darmstadtium
|
Wilhelm Röntgen
|
Roentgenium
|
Nicolaus Copernicus
|
Copernicium
|
Japan's native name
|
Nihonium
|
Georgy Flyorov
|
Flerovium
|
Moscow Oblast (region outside Moscow)
|
Moscovium
|
Livermore (city outside San Francisco and location of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
|
Livermorium
|
Tennessee (US state)
|
Tennessine
|
Yuri Oganessian
|
Oganesson
|