No. Fluorine is a nonmetal.
Flourine is a non-metal, more specifically a gas. Therefore, it does not exhibit the metal property of being malleable.
Because It has a -4 charge
Except Flourine and Chlorine, All are metals
no ionic strontium is a metal and flourine is a nonmetal
Fluorine is a halogen element. It is a non metal. Atomic number of it is 9.
Flourine is part of the Halogen groups
Flourine is not a Rare Earth Metal, but rather a Halogen, which is the second column from the right of the periodic table. Halogens react violently with Alkali Metals when heated and form stable compounds, usually salt like. Examples: Lithium + Flourine = Lithium Flouride Sodium + Chlorine = Sodium Chloride (Table salt)
Like all of the halogens, Fluorine is very much a nonmetal.
What's Flourine, I am gonna searcg that's right
If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case. If you mean something such as "pure flourine" it is referring to it's "elemental state" F2 in Flourine's case.
Flourine is a gas at room temperature, a non-metal, one of the group known as the Halogens and among the most reactive of all the elements.
The first element in the halogen group is fluorine. It is a highly reactive non-metal with a pale yellow hue.