• @thefartographer@lemm.ee
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    251 year ago

    Everyone knows that iron, like all abbreviated four-letter nouns gets abbreviated as the first three letters.

    Iro
    Jun
    Fuc

    See? Easy peasy

      • Resol van Lemmy
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        31 year ago

        Good thing I speak French, it won’t ever get me confused. In French, iron is called “fer”. Also, copper is “cuivre”, which also matches its periodic table symbol of Cu. Same can be said for lead: “plomb”.

        Unfortunately, there’s quite a few that also don’t match the symbol, some aren’t even in English. I always hated how nitrogen is called “azote” in French.

  • AbsentBird
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    261 year ago

    People will hate on this, but what other breakfast cereal contains dental X-rays in every crunch?

    • Colonel Panic
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      61 year ago

      It’s hard to make though. You have to harvest Iridium quality Wheat and mine for Iridium bars and then build the Advanced Cereal Irradiator on your farm to craft it.

      It’s hard to do until year 2.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    1 year ago

    Whenever abbreviations don’t make sense, you can safely assume it’s Latin.

      • BarqsHasBite
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        1 year ago

        Apparently tungsten is also known as Wolfram, so that’s the W. Sodium Na is from neo-latin.

          • @grandkaiser@lemmy.world
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            91 year ago

            It’s called Sodium in English because an English chemist Sir Humphrey Davy discovered it & named it “Sodium” He was able to isolate it via separation of caustic soda (sodium hydroxide) and therefore named it after the caustic soda “soda-ium”. A few years later, a German chemist (Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert) was able to isolate it and named it “Natronium” Just under a decade later, Jöns Jacob Berzelius coined the term “Natrium” as he felt the name “Natronium” was too lengthy to catch on.

            As to exactly why the earlier term was not respected is likely due to nationalism. During the earlier 1800’s a lot of countries were desperately trying to take claim for various rapid advancements in chemistry, physics, mathematics, and medicine. Getting to have the name that “your guy” coined was largely bent around national pride.

            • Ty. So the question for its rightful name simply depends on whether you give it to the one who discovered it or the one who isolated it, interesting.

              I’ll skip that discussion and just say Natrium sounds better

      • BarqsHasBite
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        1 year ago

        Hey I can finally ask, how much of medical terminology is Greek?

        • ✺roguetrick✺
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          1 year ago

          Latin is prelevant but many anatomy terms and conditions are Greek because a lot of the literature first describing conditions and early anatomy was Greek. Heme for blood, dermis for skin, cholecyst(bile bladder) for gallbladder, cyst for bladder ect. Anatomy itself is a word that comes from Greek.

      • Apathy Tree
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        131 year ago

        I literally took Latin in college for the sole reason that Latin is used in super stupid ways, and my science communication degree would be worth less without that knowledge. Because Latin-base is fully half of the science terms you need to know.

        And my college was super on board with my reasoning. Wish I’d also had the mental capacity for ancient Greek, because that’s literally the other half of naming schemes.

        Ridiculous.

        I’m super into modern scientists giving shit pop culture names. Because holy shit is it ever more memorable than some random Latin/greek bullshit.

        • @oo1@lemmings.world
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          41 year ago

          Strange that ‘classics’ are taught mostly in the poshest schools. It’s rare for elites to want to preserve any power they have and make it inaccessible to oiks. /s

      • Well, what other language should be used? Latin is the language of science because there’s no way we’d ever agree on which alive language to use.

  • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    31 year ago

    The term “oat start” makes me think of a bag of oats over one’s mouth making it impossible to start whatever they were gonna start. The meaning is enhanced by the stoppiness off the word sounds.