Graphite is not a metal. It's a form of Carbon, a non-metal.
depends on its presentation. Diamonds would be a yes, soot a no.
no
Sulfur is not lustrous.
It is a characteristic or you can say, property of metalsthat - they are LUSTROUS in nature whereas on the other hand, non-metals possess the property that - they are NON - LUSTROUS in nature.Thus, metals can be lustrous and non-metals cannot be lustrous in nature(except iodine, which is a non-metal, but is lustrous in nature).
Lustrous yellow in color is an intensive property
The lump of silicon on my bench is a shiny grey colour, with some conchoidal fracture. Definitely lustrous.
Ebony
It is non ductile and is lustrous.
No, the word 'lustrous' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun (lustrous pearls, lustrous smile).The noun form of the adjective 'lustrous' is lustrousness.The word 'lustrous' is the adjective form of the noun luster.
Sulfur is not lustrous.
It is a characteristic or you can say, property of metalsthat - they are LUSTROUS in nature whereas on the other hand, non-metals possess the property that - they are NON - LUSTROUS in nature.Thus, metals can be lustrous and non-metals cannot be lustrous in nature(except iodine, which is a non-metal, but is lustrous in nature).
Yes, many metals are lustrous.
Yes, many metals are lustrous.
The noun form of "lustrous" is "luster," which refers to a shining quality or brilliance.
A fresh surface of iron is lustrous.
Yes, neon sighting is lustrous
I suppose if I have to pick one, I'd say "nonmetal", because there's no metal called "lustrous". There's no metal called "love" either, so I guess love is also a nonmetal. A better answer might be "the word has nothing to do with the elemental metal/nonmetal dichotomy, and the question is therefore essentially meaningless".
Lustrous means shiny; having a sheen or glow.
you can find the lustrous orb inside of mt.coronet