Naming organic compounds can be tricky, and if you pursue a choose to pursue a chemistry-heavy degree later, chances are that you’ll have to keep the IUPAC nomenclature rules in the back of your mind at all times. Here’s a few compounds for y’all to practice naming.

(Disclaimer: some of these are outside the scope of VCE chem and their for people who want to extend themselves

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answers (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
pentanoic acid
2,3-diethyloctanoic acid
4-hydroxypentanoic acid

answer (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
ethanol
2-methylhex-3-enol
butan-2,4-diol
(note that I haven't done cis/trans for #2 for simplicity's sake, but bonus points if you do figure that out!

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(apologies if these look a bit different than what you're used to, the program I used to generate these made them look funny haha)
answer (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
heptanoate
3-ethylhexanoate
2-hydroxypropanoate

answer (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
pentanal
4-hydroxybutanal
4-hydroxy-4-methylpentanal

answer (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
ethanamine
3-methylbutanamine
4-amino-2-methylhexanoic acid

answer (don’t peak unless you’ve done it/are stuck)
ethanamide
2,2-diethylpentamide
2-pent-3-enamide
(Again, for simplicity's sake, I've left out the cis/trans, however bonus points for you if you figure it out!

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Small reminders:The basicsSome of the basic IUPAC nomenclature rules are:
- The longest chain of carbon atoms bonded together is the
parent chain of the hydrocarbon.
- The substituent (functional group) with the
highest priority modifies the suffix of the parent hydrocarbon (such as pentan-1-
oic acid for a pentane with a carboxylic acid bonded to the first carbon of the pentane, or butan-2-
amine for a butane with an amine group attached to the second carbon of the butane).
- If there are multiple substituents, numbering the carbons occurs from the end
closest to the functional group with the highest priority.
- Alphabetisation occurs without the multipliers; so prefixes such as di-, tri-, and tert- don’t get alphabetised (i.e. 3,3,4-triethyl-2,5-dimethylheptane alphabetises only the ethyl and methyl groups).
Priorities of functional groupsFrom the highest priority functional group to the lowest:
Carboxylic acids (have the ending -oic acid)
Esters (have the suffix -oate)
Amides (have the suffix -amide )
Aldehydes (have the suffix -anal)
Alcohols (have the suffix -ol, and the prefix hydroxy-)
Amines (have the suffix -amine, and the prefix amino-)
Alkene (has the infix -en-)
Alkyne (has the infix -yn-)
Alkyl Halides (i.e. C-Cl, C-Br) (have the prefix iodo- (for iodine), bromo- (for bromine), chloro- (for chlorine), fluoro- (for fluorine))
Alkane (has the infix -an-)