- Generally, an element is a basic part that is the foundation of something.
- For a long time, elements (classical element) were believed (by the pythagoreans and alchemists for
example) to be the building blocks of all matter in the universe. Similarly, Chinese Taoism holds that the universe is based around Five
Elements. Wicca generally recognizes the classical elements, including the fifth, spirit (akasha).
- In chemistry, an element (chemical element)
is material that consists of atoms with the same number of protons in the nucleus.
- In electronics, an element (electrical
element) is any device (such as an inductor, resistor, capacitor, conductor, line, or
cathode ray tube) with terminals at which it may be connected
directly with other devices. It can also mean a antenna radiator (either parasitic or active). In
circuitry, it can be used to specify a portion of a integrated circuit that contributes directly to the IC's
operation.
- In Morse code, an element is
the dot or dash.
- In mathematics, an element is one object contained in a set.
- In XML, an element is a particular kind of grammatical fragment of an xml document. See W3C's Logical Structures (external link).
- The mathematical treatise, Elements (Euclid's
Elements) is a mathematical treatise on geometry by Euclid.
- "The Elements" is a song by Tom Lehrer.
Etymology
The word element comes from the Latin word elementum meaning
"the basic parts that are the foundations of something". The development of this word in latin was heavily influenced by the
Greek word στοιχεῖον
(stoicheion), the exact roots of which is unknown.
See also
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one
that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and
fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.
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