False
Antoine Lavoiser proposed the use of symbols and formulas in naming elements.
Streets get their names from many different sources. One example is the method of naming streets after numbers (1st avenue, 2nd avenue.) In this example, streets are named based upon the order they were constructed in. Other street name examples include naming streets after other cities or towns, naming streets after famous people, and naming streets after foliage in the area.
if you are talking in terms of lexicology... Toponomy is the word for the naming of places. Taxonomy, the naming of animals. I'm not sure about people but I know the word Eponym, refers to a person, place or thing that something is believed to be named after.
In English there is no noun type called a 'naming noun'. A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing. The noun 'tiger' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of feline; a word for a thing.
In my opinion, only if the shape has any of three characteristics A. shape has sides outside of the side naming convention (oct, poly, etc.) B. shape is unrecognizable remotely to anything or C. shape has no sides, but many curves.
False
The rules for naming chemical elements and for chemical symbols are established by IUPAC; see this link.
The IUPAC rules for naming new chemical elements are at this link.
Nomenclature
Lavoisier
Chemical Formula Stock naming Classical naming
It was invented to solve the purpose of naming a point.
A compound is a substance made up of a definite proportion of two or more elements. A chemical formula tells us the number of atoms of each element in a compound. It contains the symbols of the atoms of the elements present in the compound as well as how many there are for each element in the form of subscripts
The chemical nomenclature system is used in naming compounds.
After the IUPAC Recommendation 2002 - Naming new elements: The elements can be named after a mythological concept, a mineral, a place or a country, a property or a very known scientist.
The chemical symbol Fr is derived of course from francium - the first two letters; it is a rule in the system of naming chemical elements.
Methane