Yes, when they become ions, their opposite charges will cause them to attract and form ionic compounds.
The stairstep pattern on the periodic table represents the division between metals (left of the staircase) and nonmetals (right of the staircase). It separates elements with significantly different properties, such as conductivity and reactivity. Elements along the staircase, known as metalloids, possess characteristics of both metals and nonmetals.
Non metals
Metalloids are located on the periodic table along the staircase dividing metals to the left and non-metals to the right. They include elements such as boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, and tellurium. Metalloids have properties intermediate between metals and non-metals.
Non metals
all are non metals
non metals
My opinion would be metal. Since non metals are brittle and dull, I disagree with the non-metals.
They are in between the metals and non metals
The most reactive non metals are Halogens which may combine most of the metals as well as non metals.
Non-metals are located on the very right of the Periodic Table. Metals are on the left.
The three types of elements are Metal, Non-metal, and Metalloid. The Metals located on the left side of the periodic table, all the way to aluminum. The metalloids are located along a stairstep line from between aluminum and boron, to between polonium and astatine. Everything to the right of the metalloids are nonmetals. Don't forget hydrogen, its way on the left side, but it is a nonmetal.
Non-metals, they are all gases.