Element
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Elements)
| Look up element in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
The name element may refer to:
In chemistry, electronics or the geosciences:
- Chemical element, an atomic structure
- Electrical element
- Landform element, a particular type of feature.
- Heating element, an electronic device that converts electricity to heat.
In computing:
- HTML element
- Element of an Array
- Adobe Photoshop Elements
- Data element is a unit of data
In law:
- Element (criminal), a basic set of common law principles regarding criminal liability.
In mathematics:
- Element (mathematics), a member of a set or class
- Euclid's Elements, a mathematical treatise on geometry and number theory
In music:
- Elements (Mike Oldfield), a number of albums by Mike Oldfield
- Elements (Roger Glover album)
- Elements, Pt. 1 & Elements, Pt. 2, albums by Stratovarius
- The Elements (song), by Tom Lehrer
- Elements (Steve Howe album)
- Elements (album) an album by Atheist
- Elements in Hip hop culture
- Elements, a song by Neo Cortex
In philosophy:
- Four elements
- Classical element
- Five elements (Chinese philosophy), the basis of the universe according to Chinese Taoism
- Five elements (Japanese philosophy), the basis of the universe according to Japanese philosophy
- Tattva, the basis of the universe according to Hindu Samkhya philosophy
- Mahābhūta Buddhist great elements
- Bhūta are five elements in Hinduism
Element may also refer to:
- element by Westin, a hotel chain
- Element Skateboards, a skateboard manufacturer
- Honda Element, a sport utility vehicle
- Elements Mall, a shopping mall in Hong Kong
- The elements, items from the Legend of Zelda series
- elemeNt, a professional Counter-Strike gamer from Norway
- The Elements of bread and wine that are consecrated at the Christian Eucharist
- Honda Element, an automobile
[edit] See also
| This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |

