Derivations of the Names and Symbols of the Elements

1A 2A 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A 8A
(1) (2) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18)
3B 4B 5B 6B 7B 8B 1B 2B
(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12)
1 H He
2 Li Be B C N O F Ne
3 Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
4 K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
5 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe
6 Cs Ba La   Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn
7 Fr Ra Ac   Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Uub Uuq
6   Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
7   Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr

 

 

Atomic
Number
Symbol

Name

Derivation of Name and Symbol
89 Ac Actinium Greek: aktinos, "ray" (because it glows with a blue light in the dark)
13 Al Aluminum Latin: alumen, "alum" (potassium aluminum sulfate)
95 Am Americium Named after the American continent, since the element above it in the lanthanide series was named after Europe
51 Sb Antimony Greek: anti + monos, "not alone" (because it was never found uncombined with another element); the symbol Sb comes from the Latin name for the mineral antimony sulfide, stibium
18 Ar Argon Greek: argos, "idle" (because of its unreactivity)
33 As Arsenic Named after the Greek word for the arsenic-containing mineral orpiment, arsenikon; this name was derived from the Arabic word zarnik
85 At Astatine Greek: astatos, "unstable"
56 Ba Barium Greek: barys, "heavy" (in reference to the high density of some barium minerals)
97 Bk Berkelium Named after Berkeley, California, the city where it was first produced
4 Be Beryllium Named after the Greek word for the mineral beryl, beryllo
83 Bi Bismuth Named after the German word for the bismuth-containing mineral bismuthinite, Bisemutum
107 Bh Bohrium Named after the physicist Niels Bohr, one of the founders of quantum theory
5 B Boron Arabic: buraq, "borax" (sodium borate)
35 Br Bromine Greek: bromos, "stench" (elemental bromine is a reddish-brown liquid with a terrible smell)
48 Cd Cadmium Named after the Greek word for the mineral calamine, cadmia.  Calamine is a mineral form of zinc carbonate; cadmium was first observed as an impurity in some calamine ores
20 Ca Calcium Latin: calx, "lime" (calcium oxide)
98 Cf Californium Named after the state and University of California, where it was first produced
6 C Carbon Latin: carbo, "charcoal"
58 Ce Cerium Named after the asteroid Ceres (which was named after the Roman goddess of agriculture)
55 Cs Cesium Latin: caesius, "sky blue" (salts of cesium produce a blue color when heated)
17 Cl Chlorine Latin: chloros, "greenish-yellow" (elemental chlorine is a pale, yellow-green gas)
24 Cr Chromium Greek: chroma, "color" (because of the wide variety of colorful salts it produces)
27 Co Cobalt German: kobold, "goblin" (because of the toxic fumes of arsenic that were produced when silver miners heated the arsenic-containing ore smaltite, mistaking it for silver ore)
29 Cu Copper Old English: coper, which in turn (along with the symbol Cu) was derived from the Latin cuprum, "from the island of Cyprus" (the leading supplier of copper in the Mediterranean at the time of the Roman empire)
96 Cm Curium Named after Marie and Pierre Curie, the co-discoverers of radioactivity
110 Ds Darmstadtium Named after the German city of Darmstadt, where the Laboratory for Heavy Ion Research (GSI, Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung) is located, and where the element was first produced
105 Db Dubnium Named after the Russian city of Dubna, where the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research is located
66 Dy Dysprosium Greek: dysprositos, "hard to get at" (because the first isolation of the element required a tedious separation sequence)
99 Es Einsteinium Named after the physicist Albert Einstein
68 Er Erbium Named after the Swedish village of Ytterby
63 Eu Europium Named after the continent of Europe
100 Fm Fermium Named after the physicist Enrico Fermi, the inventor of the first nuclear reactor
9 F Fluorine Latin: fluere, "to flow"
87 Fr Francium Named after France, the country in which it was first isolated
64 Gd Gadolinium Named for the mineral gadolinite, which was in turned named after Johan Gadolin, the Swedish chemist who first investigated it
31 Ga Gallium Named after the Latin word for France, Gallia (the country in which it was discovered)
32 Ge Germanium Named after the Latin word for Germany, Germania
79 Au Gold Anglo-Saxon name for the metal; the symbol Au is from the Latin name, aurum, "shining dawn"
72 Hf Hafnium Named after the Latin word for Copenhagen, Hafnia
108 Hs Hassium Named after the German state of Hesse, where the Laboratory for Heavy Ion Research (GSI, Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung) is located
2 He Helium Greek: helios, "Sun" (helium was discovered in an analysis of the light emitted from the Sun's corona during a solar eclipse)
67 Ho Holmium Named after the Latin word for Stockholm, Holmia
1 H Hydrogen Greek: hydro + genes, "water forming" (this name was given to the element by the French chemist Antoine Lavoisier)
49 In Indium Latin: indicum, "indigo" (after the bright violet line of its atomic spectrum)
53 I Iodine Greek: iodes, "violet" (elemental iodine forms shiny, purle crystals)
77 Ir Iridium Latin: iris, "rainbow" (because of the colorful compounds that it forms)
26 Fe Iron Anglo-Saxon: iren; the symbol Fe comes from the Latin name, ferrum
36 Kr Krypton Greek: kryptos, "hidden" (since it had been "hidden" in a sample of argon)
57 La Lanthanum Greek: lanthanein, "to be hidden" (because the element was discovered "hidden" as an impurity in ores of cerium)
103 Lr Lawrencium Named after the physicist Ernest O. Lawrence, inventor of the cyclotron
82 Pb Lead Anglo-Saxon name for the metal; the symbol Pb is from the Latin name, plumbum
3 Li Lithium Greek: lithos, "stone"
71 Lu Lutetium Named after Lutecia, the ancient word for Paris
12 Mg Magnesium Named after Magnesia, a district in Thessaly in central Greece
25 Mn Manganese Latin: magnes, "magnet" (because it can be made to be ferromagnetic with the right treatment)
109 Mt Meitnerium Named after the physicist Lise Meitner, one of the first scientists to recognize that uranium could undergo nuclear fission
101 Md Mendelevium Named after the chemist Dimitri Mendelev, the deviser of the Periodic Table of the Elements
80 Hg Mercury Named after the Roman god, Mercury (Hermes in Greek mythology), the swift-moving messenger of the gods; the symbol Hg is from the Latin name, hydragyrum, "liquid silver"
42 Mo Molybdenum Greek: molybdos, "lead" (because of its similarity to lead)
60 Nd Neodymium Greek: neos + didymos, "new twin" (this name was given when it was realized that the previously identified element "didymium" was actually two elements, which were rechristened as praseodymium and neodymium)
10 Ne Neon Greek: neos, "new"
93 Np Neptunium Named after the planet Neptune, which follows Uranus in the solar system
28 Ni Nickel German: kupfernickel, "Old Nick's copper" (i.e., copper of the devil, or false copper, because it was frequently mistaken for copper)
41 Nb Niobium Named after Niobe, a character in Greek mythology, who was the daughter of Tantalus, because of the similarity of niobium to tantalum; also known as "columbium" (Cb) by metallurgists [see page on Discoverers of the Elements]
7 N Nitrogen Latin: nitron + genes, "nitre forming" (nitre is potassium nitrate)
102 No Nobelium Named after Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prize
76 Os Osmium Greek: osme, "odor" (because of its nasty smell, which is actually caused by osmium tetroxide)
8 O Oxygen Latin: oxy + genes, "acid forming" (this name was given to the element by the French Antoine Lavoisier, because he believed it to be an essential component of all acids, although that has turned out not to be true)
46 Pd Palladium Named after the asteroid Pallas, which had been discovered the year that the metal was first isolated
15 P Phosphorus Greek: phos + phoros, "light bringing" (because it glows in the dark, and spontaneously burst into flame in air)
78 Pt Platinum Spanish: platina, "little silver" (because it was first known to Europeans as an unworkable silver-like metal found alongside gold in some deposits)
94 Pu Plutonium Named after the ex-planet Pluto, which follows Neptune in the solar system
84 Po Polonium Named for Marie Curie's native country of Poland
19 K Potassium Named after the English word for the mineral potassium carbonate, potash (which is found in high concentrations in wood ashes); the symbol K comes from the Latin name, kalium
59 Pr Praseodymium Greek: prasios + didymos, "green twin" (this name was given when it was realized that the previously identified element "didymium" was actually two elements, which were rechristened as praseodymium and neodymium)
61 Pm Promethium Named after the Greek god Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods and gave it to mankind
91 Pa Protactinium Greek: proto + actinium, "parent of actinium" (because it undergoes radioactive decay to produce actinium)
88 Ra Radium Latin: radius, "ray" (because of its ability to glow in the dark with a faint blue light)
86 Rn Radon Variation of the name of radium
75 Re Rhenium Named after the Latin word for the Rhine River, Rhenus
45 Rh Rhodium Greek: rhodon, "rose" (because of its red-colored salts)
111 Rs Roentgenium Named after the physicist Wilhelm Röntgen, the discoverer of X-rays
37 Rb Rubidium Latin: rubidius, "deep red (ruby)"
44 Ru Ruthenium Named after the Latin word for Russia, Ruthenia
104 Rf Rutherfordium Named after the physicist Ernest Rutherford, discoverer of the atomic nucleus, and a pioneer in the study of nuclear physics
62 Sm Samarium Named after the mineral samarskite, from which it was first obtained
21 Sc Scandium Named after the Latin word for Scandinavia, Scandia
106 Sg Seaborgium Named after the chemist Glenn T. Seaborg, who discovered/synthesized a number of transuranium elements
34 Se Selenium Greek: selene, "Moon" (since tellurium had been named for the Earth)
14 Si Silicon Latin: silicis, "flint"
47 Ag Silver Anglo-Saxon: siolfur; the symbol Ag comes from the Latin name, argentum
11 Na Sodium English: soda, a term found in many compounds of sodium; the symbol Na comes from the Latin name, natrium
38 Sr Strontium Named after Strontian, a town in Scotland where the mineral strontianite was discovered, from which strontium was first isolated
16 S Sulfur Derived either from Sanskrit: sulvere, Latin: sulfurium, or Arabic: sufra
73 Ta Tantalum Named after Tantalus, a character in Greek mythology, and father of Niobe
43 Tc Technetium Greek: technetos, "artificial" (because it was the first element to be produced artificially)
52 Te Tellurium Greek: tellus, "Earth"
65 Tb Terbium Named after the Swedish village of Ytterby
81 Tl Thallium Latin: thallos, "green twig" (after the bright green lines of its atomic spectrum)
90 Th Thorium Named after Thor, the Norse god of thunder
69 Tm Thulium Named after the ancient word for Scandinavia, Thule
50 Sn Tin Anglo-Saxon word for the metal; the symbol Sn comes from the Latin name, stannum
22 Ti Titanium Named after the Titans of Greek mythology
74 W Tungsten Swedish: tung sten, "heavy stone" (because of the elements high density); the symbol W comes from the German name, wolfram ("wolf dirt," so named because of its presence as an impurity in the mining of tin)
112 Uub Ununbiium Temporary, systematic name (element 112)
114 Uuq Ununquadium Temporary, systematic name (element 114)
92 U Uranium Named after the planet Uranus, which had been discovered a few years before the element
23 V Vanadium Named after Vanadis (Freya in Norse mythology), the Scandinavian goddess of beauty, because of the variety of colored salts it forms
54 Xe Xenon Greek: xenos, "stranger" (because at the time, it did not form compounds with other elements
70 Yb Ytterbium Named after the Swedish village of Ytterby
39 Y Yttrium Named after the Swedish village of Ytterby
30 Zn Zinc German: zink, which may in turn have originated from the Persian word for stone, sing
40 Zr Zirconium Arabic: zargun, "gold colored"

 

Elements known by their ancient names (or variations):

  • Carbon
  • Copper
  • Gold
  • Iron
  • Lead
  • Silicon
  • Silver
  • Sulfur
  • Tin
  • Zinc

 

Elements named after other elements:

  • Molybdenum — molybdos, "lead"
  • Platinum — "little silver"
  • Protactinium — "parent of actinium"
  • Radon — variation on radium

 

Elements named after colors:

  • Cesium:  Latin: caesius, "sky blue"
  • Chlorine:  Latin: chloros, "greenish-yellow"
  • Chromium:  Greek: chroma, "color"
  • Indium:  Latin: indicum, "indigo"
  • Iodine:  Greek: iodes, "violet"
  • Iridium:  Latin: iris, "rainbow"
  • Praseodymium:  Greek: prasios + didymos, "green twin"
  • Rhodium:  Greek: rhodon, "rose"
  • Rubidium:  Latin: rubidius, "deep red (ruby)"
  • Thallium:  Latin: thallos, "green twig"
  • Zirconium:  Arabic: zargun, "gold colored"

 

Elements named after minerals:

  • Aluminum:  Latin: alumen, "alum" (potassium aluminum sulfate)
  • Arsenic:  Greek: arsenikon, "orpiment"
  • Beryllium:  Greek: beryllo, "beryl"
  • Bismuth:  German: Bisemutum, bismuthinite"
  • Boron:  Arabic: buraq, "borax" (sodium borate)
  • Cadmium:  Greek: cadmia, "calamine"
  • Calcium:  Latin: calx, "lime" (calcium oxide)
  • Gadolinium:  gadolinite
  • Lithium:  Greek: lithos, "stone"
  • Potassium:  English: potash, potassium carbonate
  • Samarium:  samarskite
  • Sodium:  English: soda, a term found in many compounds of sodium

 

Elements named after astronomical objects:

  • Planets:
    • Neptunium — Neptune
    • Plutonium:  the dwarf planet Pluto
    • Tellurium:  the Earth
    • Uranium:  Uranus
  • Asteroids
    • Cerium:  Ceres
    • Palladium:  Pallas
  • Helium (the Sun)
  • Selenium (the Moon)

 

Elements named after continents:

  • Americium
  • Europium

 

Elements named after countries, states, or other geographical features:

  • Californium:  state (and University) of California
  • Francium:  France
  • Gallium:  Latin word for France, Gallia
  • Germanium:  Latin word for Germany, Germania
  • Hassium:  German state of Hesse, where the GSI is located
  • Magnesium:  named after Magnesia, a district in Thessaly in central Greece
  • Polonium:  named for Marie Curie's native country of Poland
  • Rhenium:  named after the Latin word for the Rhine River, Rhenus
  • Ruthenium:  named after the Latin word for Russia, Ruthenia
  • Scandium:  named after the Latin word for Scandinavia, Scandia
  • Thulium:  named after the ancient word for Scandinavia, Thule

 

Elements named after cities:

  • Berkelium:  Berkeley, California, home of the University of California, where a number of synthetic elements have been produced
  • Darmstadtium:  Darmstadt, Germany, home of the Laboratory for Heavy Ion Research (GSI, Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung) where a number of synthetic elements have been produced
  • Dubnium:  Dubna, Russia, home of the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR, Объединённый институт ядерных исследований, ОИЯИ), where a number of synthetic elements have been produced
  • Erbium, Terbium, Ytterbium, Yttrium:  all named after the Swedish village of Ytterby (near Vaxholm), where these elements were first isolated (as well as Holmium, Scandium, and Tantalum)
  • Hafnium:  Copenhagen (Hafnia), Denmark
  • Holmium:  Stockholm (Holmia), Sweden
  • Lutetium:  Paris (Lutecia), France
  • Strontium:  Strontian, Scotland

 

Elements named after characters from mythology:

  • Mercury:  Mercury, the Roman messenger of the gods (Hermes in Greek mythology)
  • Niobium:  Niobe, a character in Greek mythology, who was the daughter of Tantalus
  • Promethium:  Prometheus, a Greek god who stole fire from the gods and gave it to mankind
  • Tantalum:  Tantalus, a character in Greek mythology, and father of Niobe
  • Thorium:  Thor, the Norse god of thunder
  • Titanium:  the Titans of Greek mythology
  • Vanadium:  Vanadis (Freya in Norse mythology), the Scandinavian goddess of beauty

 

Elements named after scientists:

  • Bohrium:  Niels Bohr, one of the founders of quantum theory
  • Curium:  Marie and Pierre Curie, the co-discoverers of radioactivity
  • Einsteinium:  Albert Einstein
  • Fermium:  Enrico Fermi, the inventor of the first nuclear reactor
  • Lawrencium:  Ernest O. Lawrence, inventor of the cyclotron
  • Meitnerium:  Lise Meitner, one of the first scientists to recognize that uranium could undergo nuclear fission
  • Mendelevium:  Dimitri Mendelev, the deviser of the Periodic Table of the Elements
  • Nobelium:  Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prize
  • Roentgenium:  Wilhelm Röntgen, the discoverer of X-rays
  • Rutherfordium:  Ernest Rutherford, discoverer of the atomic nucleus, and a pioneer in the study of nuclear physics
  • Seaborgium:  Glenn T. Seaborg, who discovered/synthesized a number of transuranium elements

 

Most of the rest of the names of the elements are derived from various chemical or physical properties:

  • Actinium:  Greek: aktinos, "ray" (because it glows with a blue light in the dark)
  • Antimony:  Greek: anti + monos, "not alone" (because it was never found uncombined with another element)
  • Argon:  Greek: argos, "idle" (because of its unreactivity)
  • Astatine:  Greek: astatos, "unstable" (because it is)
  • Barium:  Greek: barys, "heavy" (in reference to the high density of some barium minerals)
  • Bromine:  Greek: bromos, "stench" (elemental bromine has a terrible smell)
  • Cobalt:  German: kobold, "goblin" (because of the toxic fumes of arsenic that were produced when silver miners heated the arsenic-containing ore smaltite, mistaking it for silver ore)
  • Dysprosium:  Greek: dysprositos, "hard to get at" (because the first isolation of the element required a tedious separation sequence)
  • Fluorine:  Latin: fluere, "to flow"
  • Hydrogen"  Greek: hydro + genes, "water forming"
  • Krypton:  Greek: kryptos, "hidden" (since it had been "hidden" in a sample of argon)
  • Lanthanum:  Greek: lanthanein, "to be hidden" (because the element was discovered "hidden" as an impurity in ores of cerium)
  • Manganese:  Latin: magnes, "magnet" (because it can be made to be ferromagnetic with the right treatment)
  • Neodymium:  Greek: neos + didymos, "new twin"
  • Neon"  Greek: neos, "new"
  • Nickel:  German: kupfernickel, "Old Nick's copper" (i.e., copper of the devil, or false copper, because it was frequently mistaken for copper)
  • Nitrogen:  Latin: nitron + genes, "nitre [potassium nitrate] forming"
  • Osmium:  Greek: osme, "odor" (because of its nasty smell, which is actually caused by osmium tetroxide)
  • Oxygen:  Latin: oxy + genes, "acid forming"
  • Phosphorus:  Greek: phos + phoros, "light bringing" (because it glows in the dark, and spontaneously burst into flame in air)
  • Radium:  Latin: radius, "ray" (because of its ability to glow in the dark with a faint blue light)
  • Technetium:  Greek: technetos, "artificial"
  • Tungsten:  Swedish: tung sten, "heavy stone" (because of the elements high density)
  • Xenon:  Greek: xenos, "stranger" (because at the time, it did not form compounds with other elements

 

 

References

John Emsley, The Elements, 3rd edition.  Oxford:  Clarendon Press, 1998.

John Emsley, Nature's Building Blocks:  An A-Z Guide to the Elements.  Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 2001.