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Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Barium
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Multilingual dictionary
Indo-EuropeanLanguage key Germanic Barium en de lb nl af fy da sv no fo Barín is Italic Baryum fr Bario es gl it Bari ca oc fur Bário pt Bariu ro Bariumu arm Slavic Барий [barij] ru bg Барiй [barij] uk Барый [baryj] by Bar pl kas Baryum cs Bárium sk Barij sl hr bos Бариjум [barijum] sr Бариум [barium] sr Baltic Baris lt Bārijs lv Barijan sud Celtic Bariwm cy Bairiam ga gd Baarium gv Baryum kw Bariom br Other Indo-European Βαριο [vario] el Barium sq Բարիում [barium] hy Indo-Iranian Барий [barij] oss Uralic Barium fi Baarium et Bárium hu Бари [bari] mok Altaic Baryum tr Барий [barij] kk uz Bari' tg Бари [bari] mn Other (Europe) Barioa eu ბარიუმი [bariumi] ka East- & South-Asia バリウム [bariumu] ja 鋇 [bei4 / booi3] zh (mand./cant.) 바륨 [baryum] ko Bari vi แบเรียม [baeriam] th Barium ms பேரியம் [pēriyam] ta Afro-Asiatic باريوم [bāriyūm] ar Barjum mt בריום [barium] he Africa Bari sw Artificial Bario eo New names Barion (BRI) aen Bolognium dms |
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
History & Etymology
The element was first isolated by Sir Humphry Davy. In his paper read for the Royal Society of London on 30 June 1808, he referred to the new alkaline earth metals in this way (note): ![]() The element was also named Barytium (Berzelius 1812), but the shorter form Barium became the finale name. Clark had proposed to name the element Plutonium, after the god of Pluto, but his proposal it was not accepted.
Chemistianity 1873
KEYAN
BARIUM forms Salts of dense gravity, It is a silvery white metal That rapidly oxides in air; 'tis ductile, And melts below redness, though not eas'ly vaporized. Barium resembles Strontium and Calcium. Further reading
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© Peter van der Krogt