An element is chemically active till it does not attain an inert gas configuration.
Yes. it is relatively inert.
active
Inert
The inert or noble gases are on the far side of the periodic table in group 18. Nitrogen is not a noble gas nor in that group. You give three choices, inert, nonreactive, and reactive. Essentially, "inert" and "nonreactive" are the same thing. Even if you didn't know the answer to this question on a test, you can automatically eliminate these choices since they are the same answer, and they both can't be correct (assuming this is multiple choice). So that leaves you with reactive, which nitrogen actually is. Most commonly, nitrogen will just react with another atom of nitrogen (triple bonded in case you're interested).
Plutonium is not an inert chemical element, plutonium is very active.
Carbon is an active element in Group 14. There are only a handful of elements that are inert, and they are located in Group 18.
an element is chemically active till it does not attain an inert gas configuration.
An element is chemically active till it does not attain an inert gas configuration.
Gold is active, or at least not inert. Only the noble gases are inert.
Radon is a practically inert chemical element, only some compounds are known now.
Yes. it is relatively inert.
Covalent Bond. Chemically Active. The only elements that are inert are group 18, or 8A.
Yes, Helium is a element. It is inert in nature.
Active. VERY active. Sometimes, EXPLOSIVELY active.
inert
xenon is an inert gas element