Southern England
GA| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|---|
| bulgaria | би́смут |
| espanja | bismuto |
| esperanto | bismuto |
| hollanti | bismut |
| italia | bismuto |
| japani | ビスマス (bisumusu / bisumasu), 蒼鉛 (sōen) |
| kreikka | βισμούθιο (vismoúthio) |
| latina | bisemutum |
| latvia | bismuts |
| liettua | bismutas |
| norja | vismut |
| portugali | bismuto |
| puola | bizmut |
| ranska | bismuth |
| ruotsi | vismut |
| saksa | Wismut, Bismut |
| suomi | vismutti |
| tanska | vismuth |
| turkki | bizmut |
| tšekki | bismut, vizmut |
| unkari | bizmut |
| venäjä | ви́смут (vísmut), висмут (vismut) |
| viro | vismut |
| Monikko | bismuths |
A chemical element (symbol Bi) with an atomic number of 83: a brittle silvery-white metal.
The chemical element bismuth as synthetically made crystals. The surface is oxide free. Additionally, a high purity (99.99 %) 1 cm3 bismuth cube for comparison.
A chemical element (symbol Bi) with an atomic number of 83: a brittle silvery-white metal.
Alchemical symbol used by Torbern Bergman (1775)
A chemical element (symbol Bi) with an atomic number of 83: a brittle silvery-white metal.
Left: A bismuth hopper crystal exhibiting the stairstep crystal structure and iridescent colors, which are produced by interference of light within the oxide film on its surface. Right: a 1 cm3 cube of unoxidised bismuth metal