Elementymology & Elements Multidict |
Gallium
Gallium – Gallium – Gallium – Galio – ガリウム – Галлий – 鎵
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Multilingual dictionary
Indo-European
Gallium Latin Germanic
Gallium AfrikaansGallium Danish Gallium German Gallium English Gallium Faroese Gallium Frisian (West) Gallín Icelandic Gallium Luxembourgish Gallium Dutch Gallium Norwegian Gallium Swedish Italic
Galio AragoneseGaliumu Aromanian Galiu Asturian Gal·li Catalan Galio Spanish Gallium French Gali Friulian Galio Galician Gallio Italian Gàli Lombard Galli Occitan Gálio Portuguese Galiu Romanian - Moldovan Slavic
Галий [Galij] BulgarianGalij[um] Bosnian Галій [halij] Belarusian Gallium Czech Gallij Croatian Gôl Kashubian Галиум [Galium] Macedonian Gal Polish Галлий [Gallij] Russian Gálium Slovak Galij Slovenian Галијум [Galijum] Serbian Галій [halij] Ukrainian Baltic
Galis LithuanianGallijs Latvian Galis Samogitian Celtic
Galliom BretonGaliwm Welsh Gailliam Gaelic (Irish) Gailliam Gaelic (Scottish) Gallium Gaelic (Manx) Galyum Cornish Other Indo-European
Γαλλιο [gallio] Greek.ալիում [(g)alium] Armenian Galium, ²Galliumi Albanian Indo-Iranian/Iranian
Galyûm KurdishГаллий [gallij] Ossetian Галлий [Galli'] Tajik Indo-Iranian/Indo-Aryan
গ্যালিয়াম [gyāliẏāma] Bengaliگالیم [galym] Persian ગૅલિયમનો [geliyamano] Gujarati गैलियम [gailiyama] Hindi Finno-Ugric
Gallium EstonianGallium Finnish Gallium Hungarian Галлий [Gallij] Komi Галлий [Gallij] Mari Гали [gali] Moksha Gallium Võro Altaic
Qallium AzerbaijaniГалли [Galli] Chuvash Галлий [gallij] Kazakh Галлий [Gallij] Kyrgyz Галли [galli] Mongolian Galyum Turkish گاللىي [galliy] Uyghur Galliy Uzbek Other (Europe)
Galioa Basqueგალიუმი [galiumi] Georgian Afro-Asiatic
جاليوم [ghāliyūm] Arabicגליום [galium] Hebrew Gallju[m] Maltese Sino-Tibetan
Kâ (鎵) Hakkaガリウム [gariumu] Japanese 갈륨 [gallyum] Korean แกลเลียม [kaenliam] Thai Gali Vietnamese 鎵 [jia1 / ga1] Chinese Malayo-Polynesian
Galio CebuanoGalium Indonesian Gallium Māori Gallium Malay Other Asiatic
ഗാലിയം [gāliyam] Malayalamகல்லியம் [kalliyam] Tamil Africa
Galu LingalaGalliamo Sesotho Gali Swahili North-America
Galio NahuatlSouth-America
Galyu QuechuaCreole
Galimi Sranan TongoArtificial
Galio EsperantoNew names
Galion Atomic ElementsFastmelter Dorseyville |
History & Etymology
Gallium was discovered in 1875 by the French chemist Paul Émile (François) Lecoq de Boisbaudran (1838-1912). Spectroscopic examination of concentrates from a Pyrenea blende revealed emission lines whose positions corresponded to those predicted for eka-aluminum, a missing element between Aluminum and Indium in Mendeleyev's Periodic Table of the elements. Lecoq de Boisbaudran subsequently prepared this new element by electrolysis of caustic solutions and observed some of its properties. He announced the discovery in his article "Caractères chimiques et spectroscopiques d'un nouveau métal, le gallium, découvert dans une blende de la mine de Pierrefitte, vallée d'Argelès (Pyrénées)" in 1875, without any explanation for the choice of the name (note): Shortly after the naming of the new element the story came that the discoverer Lecoq de Boisbaudran has named the element after himself: gallium > gallus = cock = in French: le coq. Two years later, in 1877, Lecoq published "About a New Metal, Gallium" (note). In this second article he explained why he named the new metal Gallium, "On August 27, 1875, between three and four at night, I perceived the first indications of the existence of a new element that I named gallium in honor of France (Gallia)." France is Lecoq's native country and the place of discovery (cf. Francium). In answer to a question of Svetla Baykoucheva on the Chemical Information Sources Discussion List of 16 March 1999 "Was the French chemist Paul-Emile LeCoq de Boisbeaudran still alive, when the chemical element he had discovered was named Gallium" Wade Lee wrote on the same day: "I have done extensive research on this matter along with a chemist colleague, Dr. Jimmie Edwards. He was indeed alive, and he himself named it, and specified that it was in honor of his country, France, aka Gallia.Source: Archives of chminf-l. Despite this, almost all webpages with the periodical system mention the derivation > gallia and gallus simultaneously.
Gallia
Gaul (Latin: Gallia) is a historical name used in the context of Ancient Rome in references to the region of Western Europe approximating present day France and Belgium, but also sometimes including the Po Valley, western Switzerland, and the parts of the Netherlands and Germany on the west bank of the Rhine. In English, the word Gaul may also refer to an inhabitant of that region (French: Gaulois), although the expression may be used more generally for all ancient speakers of the Gaulish language (an early variety of Celtic). This language was widespread in Europe, but it shared Gaul with other languages (including at least the Aquitanian language, and also possibly a separate Belgic language). The Latin name for Gaul, still used as the modern Greek word for France, is Gallia (note).
Further reading
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