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 the adjective 'lustrous' is lustrousness.The word 'lustrous' is the adjective form of the noun luster.
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