You gots the Li_3N salt, which is a stable salt, even tho in moist air it would hydrolyze to lithium hydroxide and ammonia.
And so we got 3xxLi^+ and 1xxN^(3-) IN ONE FORMULA UNIT.
Looking at the Periodic Table, and there should be one beside you now, we find that for Li, Z=3, and for N, Z=7. And Z is the atomic number, the number of massive, positively charged particles that are contained in that element's nucleus, and Z determines the identity of the element.
So given that Li^+ has a formal positive charge, it must have ONLY 2 electrons. And since nitrogen has a formal 3- NEGATIVE CHARGE, it must have 10 electrons. Do you agree? This is something you should spend some time on if you don't see the significance.
And we puts the salt together, we gots 3xx3(Li) and 7(N) positive nuclear charges; that's 16 nucular charges, and 3xx2(Li) and 10(N) ELECTRONIC CHARGES. Since the electronic charges equal the nuclear charge, the salt is NEUTRAL AS REQUIRED.
AND we could even formulate the formation of the salt as a standard redox reaction.....the metal is OXIDIZED.....
Li rarr Li^+ + e^- (i)
.....the non-metal is reduced.....
1/2N_2 +3e^(-) rarr N^(3-) (ii)
And cross-multiply the individual redox couples....3xx(i) + (ii) to get.....
3Li+1/2N_2rarrLi_3N
This is one of the few reactions that dinitrogen will undergo at room temperature; mind you it's slow. Happy?