Crossword Clue: Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange"
If you're looking for all of the crossword answers for the clue "Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange"" then you're in the right place. We found 1 answers for this crossword clue.
If you are stuck trying to answer the crossword clue "Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange"", and really can't figure it out, then take a look at the answers below to see if they fit the puzzle you're working on.
Matching Crossword Puzzle Answers for "Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange""
Below is the complete list of answers we found in our database for Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange":
Possibly related crossword clues for "Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange""
Based on the answers listed above, we also found some clues that are possibly similar or related to Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange":
- 132 Inert gas
- 1980s Big Apple nightclub with a chemical name
- "54" on the periodic table
- An inert gas
- A noble gas
- Arc lamp gas
- Arc-lamp gas
- Atomic number 54
- It doesn't react well
- It follows iodine in the periodic table
- Element 54
- Element #54
- Element above radon in the periodic table
- Element from the Greek for "strange"
- Element from the Greek word for "strange"
- Element in arc lamps
- Element in headlights
- Element in many arc lamps
- Fifth member in a noble line
- Fifth noble gas
- Element in some auto headlights
- Element in some electric lamps
- Element in strobe lights
- Element named from the Greek for "strange"
- Element next to iodine in the periodic table
- Element next to iodine on the periodic table
- Element No. 54
- Element number 54
- Chemical used in anaesthesia
- Filling for a TV tube
- Bubble-chamber gas
- It might be in the spotlight
- Gas discovered in 1898
- Gas for headlights
- Gas from the Greek for "strange"
- Gas in an arc lamp
- Gas in an ion thruster
- Gas in arc lamps
- Gas in flashtubes
- Gas in some headlights
- Gas in strobe lights
- Gas in the atmosphere
- Gas present in the Martian atmosphere
- Gas used in arc lamps
- Gas used in flash lamps
- Gas used in flashtubes
- Gas used in headlights
- Gas used in high-intensity headlights
- Gas used in lasers
- Gas used in plasma screens
- Gas used in some lamps
- Gas used in tubes
- Gas used in TV tubes
- Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange"
- Gaseous element in our atmosphere
- Gaseous element used in lasers
- Gaseous element
- It's 54, periodically speaking
- First inert gas made into a compound
- It's a gas
- Hard-to-combine gas
- It's noble
- It's often in the spotlight
- Flash lamp filler
- Flash lamp gas
- Flash tube gas
- Flashbulb element
- Flashlamp gas
- Flashtube gas
- It's under krypton on the periodic table
- Headlight gas
- Heavy gas
- Heavy gaseous element
- Heavy inert gas
- Heavy, inert gas
- Heavy noble gas
- Inert gas used in radio valves
- Inert gas, Xe
- Inert gas
- Colorless gas
- Colorless, gaseous element
- Colorless, inactive gas
- Kin of argon and neon
- Strobe light element
- Strobe light gas
- Stroboscope gas
- Plasma screen component
- Odorless gas
- Radio-tube filler
- Radio tube filler
- Radio tube gas
- One of the noble gases
- Relative of neon
- Periodic table's 54
- Noble gas discovered in 1898
- Noble gas in some lamps
- Noble gas that has the symbol Xe
- Noble gas used in some lamps
- Noble gas
- Only element that starts with X
- Photographic flash gas
- Light gas
- Propellant in ion thrusters
- TV-tube element
- TV-tube gas
- TV-tube material
- TV tube material
- This, on the periodic table
- Unreactive gas
- Second-heaviest noble gas
Recent Usage of Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange" in Crossword Puzzles
We track a lot of different crossword puzzle providers to see where clues like "Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange"" have been used in the past.
Here are all of the places we know of that have used Gas whose name comes from the Greek for "strange" in their crossword puzzles recently:
- New York Times - May 12, 2019