Chemical symbol
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Categories: Articles lacking sources from February 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Chemical elements | Symbols
A chemical symbol is an abbreviation or short representation of the name of a chemical element, generally assigned in relation to its Latin name. Natural elements all have symbols of one or two letters; some man-made elements have temporary symbols of three letters. Chemical symbols are listed in the periodic table and are used as shorthand and in chemical equations, e.g.,
Because chemical symbols are often derived from the Latin or Greek name of the element, they may not bear much similarity to the common English name, e.g., Na for sodium (Latin natrium) and Au for gold (Latin aurum). In China, each chemical element is assigned an ideograph as its symbol; most of them have been explicitly created for this purpose (see Chinese characters for chemical elements). Chemical symbols may also be changed to show if one particular isotope of an atom that is specified, as well as to show other attributes such as ionization and oxidation state of a chemical compound. Examples of families
Examples of physical properties
Examples of chemical properties:
For complete listings of the chemical elements and their symbols, see:
External linksast:Símbolu químicu br:Simbol kimiek da:Kemisk symbol de:Elementsymbol el:Χημικό σύμβολο es:Símbolo químico eo:Kemia simbolo ko:원소 기호 it:Simbolo chimico he:סמל כימי hu:Vegyjel ms:Simbol kimia nl:Chemisch symbool ja:元素記号 no:Kjemisk symbol nn:Kjemisk symbol nds:Atomteken pt:Símbolo químico ru:Химические знаки simple:Chemical symbol sl:Kemijski simbol sr:Хемијски симбол fi:Kemiallinen merkki sv:Kemiskt tecken tr:Element simgesi |


