Yes. Except for hydrogen all elements on of the left side of the periodic table are metals. The nonmetals and metalloids are at the right side of the table.
The metalloids split the table these are a diagonal group of elements, B, Si, Ge, As, Sb and Te. To their right are the non metals to the left the metals. There are many more metals than any other type of element. See Wikipedia article "Periodic table (metals and non metals)"
Metalloids can be found along the zig-zag line in the periodic table. Any element that shares at least 1 side with the zig-zag line is a metalloid, excluding aluminium and antimony. Aluminum and antimony are metals.
any of the metalloids. find a periodic table. there should be a thick line that looks like a set of stairs towards the right side of the table. any element along that line is a metalloid.
It depends on the maker of the table, but generally if there's any designation at all it will be with background color or a thick black zigzag line drawn through the middle of the table, with the elements above and to the right being the nonmetals (and the elements that actually border the line being called "semimetals" or "metalloids").
Metals, nonmetals, and metalloids.
Yes there is. About 74% of the periodic table is metals.
Any Element found by mankind is on the Periodic Table.
Chromium is consistently classified as a metal. On the periodic table it lies well away from any of the metal/metalloid boundaries no mater whose definition or classification scheme you use to define metalloids..
The transition metals are located in groups 3 - 12 on the Periodic Table.
Periodic table lists elements and not compounds.
you can always search periodic table on google.