ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Chemistry: 5.2 Element Names and Symbols 68 Views
Share It!
Description:
Like many people, elements have nicknames they go by instead of their full name. Shmoop even has one of those. But we'll never say it aloud. Shmoo is such a weird nickname. Oh no.
Transcript
- 00:03
There are a lot of elements on the
- 00:05
periodic table... like, more than we have
- 00:08
fingers and toes combined. So it's best to [Guy looking confused in front of the periodic table]
- 00:10
just focus on the first 30 and get those
- 00:12
nailed down at least, first. Well, to help
Full Transcript
- 00:15
you, we're going to zip through these
- 00:16
babies and give you a helpful visual for [Backpack is unzipped and elements are inside]
- 00:18
each. You'll never look neon the same way again.
- 00:21
In fact, you probably shouldn't be
- 00:22
staring at neon too much anyway. Okay, [Guy hurts his eyes looking at neon]
- 00:24
here we go. Hydrogen regularly competes
- 00:27
in hurdle events. Helium's favorite [Hydrogen jumping a hurdle]
- 00:31
animated character is He-Man. Lithium [Helium reading He Man]
- 00:34
would never lie to you.
- 00:37
Beryllium is allergic to bee stings. [A bee stinging beryllium]
- 00:40
Boron has an oddly-shaped bump on her head.
- 00:44
Carbon is a pretty average student. [Carbon with a C graded test]
- 00:46
Nitrogen once participated in a Nordic [Nitrogen skiing]
- 00:49
skiing event at the Olympics. Oxygen likes
- 00:52
to splurge on Oreos. Fluorine is a less
- 00:56
than average student. Neon just banged [Fluorine holding an F graded test]
- 00:59
his knee on the desk, and it really hurt.
- 01:02
Sodium is one-half of of a nana and one-third
- 01:07
of a banana. Magnesium measures all of her
- 01:11
food in milligrams. It takes forever to [Putting food on a scale]
- 01:14
eat anything. Aluminum, well, you can
- 01:17
call him Al.
- 01:18
Silicon tends to sigh heavily whenever [Silicon carrying a briefcase]
- 01:22
she's tired. Phosphorus really has to pee.
- 01:26
Sulfur draws squiggles in the margins of
- 01:29
his english essays. Chlorine has a habit
- 01:32
of clapping in the closet. It's worrying her [Chlorine clapping next to clothes]
- 01:35
parents. Argon is a pirate.
- 01:37
Potassium eats Kellogg's Special K for
- 01:41
every meal. Calcium lives on the sunny
- 01:44
beaches of California. Ccandium lives on [Calcium surfing]
- 01:48
the not-quite-as-sunny beaches of South
- 01:50
Carolina. Titanium hates having to wear a
- 01:54
tie to work.
- 01:55
Vanadium is victorious on the field of [Statue of vanadium]
- 01:59
battle. Chromium eats crepes filled
- 02:02
with crab and cream. Well, to each their own.
- 02:04
Manganese lives in a cozy cottage right
- 02:07
smack-dab in the middle of the alphabet.
- 02:09
Iron will have you over and, you know,
- 02:13
cook dinner for a fee. Cobalt is the owner [Iron waving money]
- 02:16
and manager of a brand new company. [Cobalt cuts the ribbon of a new store]
- 02:19
Nickel is one of the knights who say, "Ni." Copper
- 02:24
can see you. Zinc is catching Zs... um... and an N. [Zinc asleep]
- 02:29
And there you go: first 30 elements. We'd keep
- 02:32
going, but the imagination center of your [Elements going into a guys brain]
- 02:34
brain could probably use a break.
Up Next
When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...
Related Videos
Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...
ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?
AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 1, Problem 1. Which literary device is used in lines 31 to 37?
AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 2, Problem 1. What claim does Bacon make that contradicts the maxim "Whatsoever is delig...