Hearthian elements
I've begun work on a second edition of the Hearthian grammar, and one thing this entails is coining scientific vocabulary, including Hearthian names for the atomic elements. Here's a glimpse at that.
Prehistoric elements
Some elements can just be dug up out of the ground and are therefore easy for a low-tech culture to identify. The names for these are short and opaque: brant (iron), diyr (gold), oog (lead).
Noble gases
As humans did, Hearthians first identified helium from the light emission spectrum of their sun, hence the name grotyrn "sun-air". Neon is ykliimyrn "float-air" for being less dense than the atmosphere; conversely, argon is liimyrn "heavy-air".
Readers familiar with Hearthian morphology may ask, why is "float" ykliim instead of yliim? That's because it's underlyingly yk-ol-liim "un-apply-heavy"; the l in ol is deleted by contact with the identical l in liim, and the o is subject to intertonic vowel deletion. The k in yk is brought out by a vowel to the right, and it stays even if that vowel goes away.
Heavier noble gases were named for their atomic numbers: krypton is linkyrn "36-air", xenon omdathligyrn "54-air" (lit. "one-three-zero-air"), and radon rozrozrozyrn "86-air" (lit. "two-two-two-air"). This fallback strategy applied to any element that hadn't been isolated but was predicted to exist.
Biochemical elements
Timber Hearth life was based on carbon, or railok "charcoal-stuff". The atmosphere was mostly nitrogen (ypthyrn "un-breath-air") and oxygen (zakyrn "fire-air" for its role in combustion). Metabolic processes require water as a solvent, which is made of hydrogen, aptly named vizyrn "water-air".
Sodium (klornzok "salt-crystal-stuff", a self-explanatory name) is necessary for nerve function and fluid balance, and magnesium (chornzok "spinel stuff" for its presence in that gem) plays a critical role in synthesis of DNA.
Hearthians shared our hypothesis that alien life could substitute carbon with silicon (drinzok "quartz stuff"). The only alien species known to them, the Nomai, were also carbon-based.
Arsenic and mercury were named for their poisonous properties: respectively zerchril "stop-heart" and zerchan "stop-nerve". (Cinnabar ore is tyvzyrch, from tyev-zerchan "red-mercury".)
Elements found in minerals
Many elements were named for gems and rocks that contain them. Sodium, magnesium, and silicon are mentioned above. Beryllium (kimkrok) comes from beryl (kimkor), boron (chimvok) from borax (chimov), aluminum (targraz) from corundum (taree), sulfur (zaktrok) from pyrite (zaktir), potassium (ympvok) from feldspar (ympov), and titanium (notrok) from rutile (notir).
In a non-obvious case, chromium's name (alzok) appears to come from blood (aalz). Chromium did not have a cardiovascular function in Hearthian biology; the name is from taree alzech "bloody corundum", as rubies are colored red by chromium.
















