No, tin is a pliable metal
There are two metals present in group-14. They are lead and tin. The atomic number of lead is 82 and tin is 50.
A brittle, mildly toxic, silver-white metalloid which looks similar to tin.
Do you mean 'constituents'? if so then the answer is Bronze primarily consists of copper, usually with tin as the main additive. It is hard and brittle, and it was particularly significant in antiquity
Nails are metal.
No, carbon is not malleable. Pick a form, hit with a hammer, and it won't "flatten out" like, say, gold. Carbon in the form of graphite or diamond won't do well when struck.
a nonmetal because a metal is shiny and strong so a nonmetal is brittle and dull
Tin is brittle because it is easily breakable.
a nonmetal because a metal is shiny and strong so a nonmetal is brittle and dull
-nonmalleable -brittle -insulator -nonductile
Brittleness is usually associated with metalloids.
Brittle is neither a metal or nonmetal, it is a physical property of materials.Brittle is a property of a material. Most metals are not brittle but ductile and maleable.
tin
Brittleness is usually associated with metalloids.
A nonmetal is an element that tends to be dull, brittle, and a poor conductor of heat and electricity.
a nonmetal because a metal is shiny and strong so a nonmetal is brittle and dull
Brittle is an attribute or property of a substance. It is the property of the substance shattering or breaking due to an impact. Consequently some metals are brittle as are some non-metals.
Metals generally aren't brittle. The most common one you'd be familiar with is probably tin, which at temperatures below about 56 degrees Fahrenheit slowly changes to the grey tin alleotrope which is brittle (ordinary "white tin" is malleable).