(I did not make the map, the typo is not my doing.)

  • tiredofsametab
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    57 hours ago

    If any one is curious about japanese, it’s basically natrium ナトリウム (and potassium is kalium カリウム)

  • @werefreeatlast
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    311 hours ago

    I like the one that almost looks like “Natriguana”

  • @[email protected]
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    1001 day ago

    I found a reddit post why sodium and potassium have 2 names:

    There was some argument over what to call the elements. They were discovered by Sir Humphrey Davy who called them “sodium” from the Latin “sodanum” for a compound of sodium used as a treatment for headaches, and “potassium” from English “potash” which was the method used to extract potassium salts.

    But a German chemist, Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert, proposed “natronium” from Neo-Latin as a reference to “natron” which is what the Egyptians called sodium carbonate, and “kalium” from the Neo-Latin of the Arabic “al qalyah” which means “ashes”.

    So in English they were “sodium” and “potassium”, but in German they were “Natronium” (now simply “Natrium”) and “Kalium”.

    It just so happened that the guy who invented the modern chemical symbols was Jöns Jacob Berzelius. He was Swiss and spoke German, so he derived the symbols from the German names.

      • @Test_Tickles
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        25 hours ago

        Switzerland and Sweden aren’t the same country? Well God damnit, there goes my dream vacation of visiting the home of Ikea and chocolate.
        Wait, now which one of them am I supposed to refer to as Swaziland?

    • Apathy Tree
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      18 hours ago

      Is that why potassium is K on the periodic table?

      And now that I think about it, sodium is Na…

      Damnit, our educational system has been telling us we are wrong the whole time! Sneaky bullshit!

      • @[email protected]
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        18 hours ago

        Berzelius was an asshole. Antimony is Antimon* in most languages, even in German, but he chose Sb from Latin stibium

        Found one more, with a similar double name, but there he used at least the German name: Tungsten (W) is Wolfram in German

    • @[email protected]
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      391 day ago

      That’s almost as much fun as Davy pointlessly waffling between alumium, aluminum, and aluminium till we once again ended up with people who speak the same language using different terms.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 hours ago

      In German, we also have “Pottasche” as the trivial name of potassium carbonate

        • @[email protected]
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          48 hours ago

          And pot=pot, so potassium is ‘from the ashpot’ which was how kalium salts were extracted, by adding water to wood ash, then filtering and evaporating the water off.

    • @lunarul
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      1020 hours ago

      But nobody actually calls it “natriu”, it’s just a thing you hear once in school to help you remember why the symbol is Na and then never use it again.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 hours ago

      Fun fact: Tungsten ist W/Volfram in Norwegian, Danish and Swedish where its English name, tung sten meaning “heavy stone”, originates from.

      • @Valmond
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        510 hours ago

        Just to clarify, Swedish for “heavy stone” is literally “tung sten”.

        I don’t know if it came around for non Scandinavians.

    • AItoothbrush
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      26 hours ago

      Funny thing is hungarian also does the same. Á is the long form of a(tho the sound of it does change for some absurd reason i dont know). Tho finnish doesnt do it which is sad because then all the finno-ugric languages in europe would say it naatrium.

    • Flying SquidOP
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      191 day ago

      Meanwhile, they don’t have time to say ‘sodium’ in Poland. They’re way too busy.

  • @[email protected]
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    1123 hours ago

    Well The Lithuanian one is wrong the person who made this couldn’t even copy from google translate. it is natris

    • @Zer0_F0x
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      1322 hours ago

      That’s where the (Na) comes from. Anything starting with Nit comes from Nitrogen (N)