SO as noobest and DU are convinced is the element with symbol Na called Sodium or "Natrium"
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Poll
What is the real term for the chemical with element symbol Na ?
Sodium Na (like in the real world) | 76% | 76% - 36 | ||||
Natrium (in make believe finland) | 23% | 23% - 11 | ||||
Total: 47 |
NATRIUM FTW
surgeon sux
surgeon sux
main battle tank karthus medikopter 117 megamegapowershot gg
ohmagawds where are all the people that live in the real worldDeathUnlimited wrote:
NATRIUM FTW
surgeon sux
Natrium Like In Germany
Sodium is teh win!
NooBesT is teh nub.
NooBesT is teh nub.
So it's called Sodium.Sodium's symbol, Na, comes from the neo-Latin name for a common sodium compound named natrium, which comes from the Greek nítron, a natural mineral salt whose primary ingredient is hydrated sodium carbonate. The difference between the English name soda and the abbreviation Na comes from Berzelius' publication of his system of atomic symbols in Thomas Thomson's Annals of Philosophy
Last edited by Bertster7 (2007-04-11 08:51:00)
[HhB]Jonny-JX wrote:
Natrium Like In Germany
Natrijs! eh.. NATRIUM!
though here in Czech it is called Sodium lol
though here in Czech it is called Sodium lol
It is natrium. It fits better to our mouths than södiöiyum.
What is Natrium then?Bertster7 wrote:
So it's called Sodium. Natrium is different.Sodium's symbol, Na, comes from the neo-Latin name for a common sodium compound named natrium, which comes from the Greek nítron, a natural mineral salt whose primary ingredient is hydrated sodium carbonate. The difference between the English name soda and the abbreviation Na comes from Berzelius' publication of his system of atomic symbols in Thomas Thomson's Annals of Philosophy
C'mon - All you educated people Vote Sodium!!
in the first sentance on wiki it says that sodium is Na BUT natrium is latin for sodium so wouldn't that make it the same thing ?
vote sodium then nubbinssdlettonieCZLV wrote:
Natrijs! eh.. NATRIUM!
though here in Czech it is called Sodium lol
Yeah, that's what we tried to tell him but he didn't listen... He got all gay about this on IRC.Pavil9999 wrote:
in the first sentance on wiki it says that sodium is Na BUT natrium is latin for sodium so wouldn't that make it the same thing ?
null vote, They are the same. think scientific names for species. we call them different things, but their correct designation is the latin scientific name. Same idea here. So, latin Natrium = common day Sodium.
Remember Me As A Time Of Day
It's sodium.
For natrium:
Hope that clears things up!
P.S. I must note, this is common usage. Natrium is the technical name still used in some languages, but sparingly in mainly-English speaking countries.
For natrium:
So, natrium is a sodium compound - not sodium!wikipedia wrote:
sodium compound named natrium, which comes from the Greek nítron, a natural mineral salt whose primary ingredient is hydrated sodium carbonate.
Hope that clears things up!
P.S. I must note, this is common usage. Natrium is the technical name still used in some languages, but sparingly in mainly-English speaking countries.
Last edited by TheDarkRaven (2007-04-11 08:57:14)
A sodium compound. Like salt. That's what that seems to say. Although that could just be typical unclear Wikipedia stuff. I did think it was just the latin name though.NooBesT[FiN] wrote:
What is Natrium then?Bertster7 wrote:
So it's called Sodium. Natrium is different.Sodium's symbol, Na, comes from the neo-Latin name for a common sodium compound named natrium, which comes from the Greek nítron, a natural mineral salt whose primary ingredient is hydrated sodium carbonate. The difference between the English name soda and the abbreviation Na comes from Berzelius' publication of his system of atomic symbols in Thomas Thomson's Annals of Philosophy
this aint the past though is it, we are in the present i mean how many people speak latin compared to "modern" languagesheggs wrote:
null vote, They are the same. think scientific names for species. we call them different things, but their correct designation is the latin scientific name. Same idea here. So, latin Natrium = common day Sodium.
Na+ right? Natrium?
Remember Me As A Time Of Day
I agree, Latin is dead, but you can't argue with the fact they are synomyms. I am simply saying it's a matter of two words describing the same thing.surgeon_bond wrote:
this aint the past though is it, we are in the present i mean how many people speak latin compared to "modern" languagesheggs wrote:
null vote, They are the same. think scientific names for species. we call them different things, but their correct designation is the latin scientific name. Same idea here. So, latin Natrium = common day Sodium.
Remember Me As A Time Of Day
quite the contrary my confused friendDeathUnlimited wrote:
NATRIUM FTW
surgeon sux
response in 58 secs. pretty impressive. internet pro.NooBesT[FiN] wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natrium
now close/delete this topic, k?
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