Oxygen = O
Nitrogen = N
Iron = Fe
Your question is not clear.
Example of chemical elements:
1. Uranium (from the planet Uranus)
2. Fermium (from E. Fermi)
3. Hassium (from Hesse)
scientists haven't figured out that element.
On the table of elements.
No. Most of the symbols for elements are derived from their names in English. Most of the elements were not even known in ancient Greece.
Only chemical elements have chemical symbols.
Symbols are the short forms to represent elements. Each element will have a unique symbol.
There are a few chemical elements with three-letter symbols. Some examples include: Tin (Sn) Barium (Ba) Xenon (Xe) Argon (Ar) Radon (Rn) These elements are often represented by their chemical symbols, which are typically one or two letters.
99 elements have been identified and named and given 2 letter symbols. 13 elements have 1 letter symbols. Additional elements have been theorized, but not synthesized or named, and have 3 letter symbols. See Wikipedia Periodic Tables, linked.
These symbols are the standardized symbols for chemical elements: some examples are Na, K, Li, Ca, Mg, Th, Cu, Fe etc.
All the elements listed on periodic table has symbols for them.There are total 118 elements in periodic table.
There are many words that can be made with the chemical symbols from the periodic table of elements. Some examples include SOUP, LiNK, SeAl, NO, and TaNK.
scientists haven't figured out that element.
Symbols of chemical elements are derived from the chemical name.
Most elements have either 1 or 2 letters but some elements such as Ununpentium, have 3 (Uup)
On the table of elements.
some elements do not use their first letters of their English names as their symbols. The symbols for these elements may come from the names of the elements in a different language.
Some chemical elements have two-letter symbols. The first is written as a capital, and the second small (lower case). Examples: gold = Au iron = Fe
symbols of the elements symbols of the elements