Why "meth-", "eth-", "prop-", when there is "uni-","di-","tri-"?
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00:00 Why &Quot;Meth-&Quot;, &Quot;Eth-&Quot;, &Quot;Prop-&Quot;, When There Is &Quot;Uni-&Quot;,&Quot;Di-
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Hire the world's top talent on demand or became one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
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Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Quiet Intelligence
--
Chapters
00:00 Why &Quot;Meth-&Quot;, &Quot;Eth-&Quot;, &Quot;Prop-&Quot;, When There Is &Quot;Uni-&Quot;,&Quot;Di-
00:48 Accepted Answer Score 54
01:38 Thank you
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#meaning #etymology
#avk47
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 54
Short answer: they were invented to preserve names of organic substances that already were in use. From Wikipedia's article on number prefixes:
The IUPAC nomenclature of organic chemistry uses the numerical prefixes derived from Greek, except for the prefix for 9 (as mentioned) and the prefixes from 1 to 4 (meth-, eth-, prop-, and but-), which are not derived from words for numbers.
These prefixes were invented by the IUPAC, deriving them from the pre-existing names for several compounds that it was intended to preserve in the new system:
- methane (via methyl which is in turn from the Greek word for wine),
- ethane (from ethyl coined by Justus von Liebig in 1834),
- propane (from propionic which is in turn from pro- and the Greek word for fat), and
- butane (from butyl which is in turn from butyric which is in turn from the Latin word for butter).