No. Solids do not boil, but they may sublime, which is when a solid goes directly into the gas phase without melting first. However, lithium does not sublime. Its melting point is 180.54 degrees Celsius, and its boiling point is 1342 degrees Celsius. So lithium is a liquid before reaching its boiling point.
LiCl is the formula for lithium chloride.The boiling point of lithium chloride is 1,382 degrees Celsius.That would be 2,519.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
Lithium is solid in room temperature.
Iodine, at p=p0,Boiling point 457.4 K,  184.3 °C(So I don't know if you'd call this high or low? compared with what?)However the difference with melting point of Iodine (386.85 K,  113.7 °C) is remarkably small (< 71oC) and the solid is quite vaporous far below its boiling point (Triple point 386.65K (113.5oC), 12.07 kPa, just below melting point).
Lithium is not a gas but solid metal
The boiling point is the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the external pressure. It is also the condensation point. The freezing point is the temperature at which liquid and solid coexist in equilibrium. It is also the melting point.
THE DENSITY OF LITHIUM IS THE MELTING AND BOILING POINT
The boiling point of lithium is 1 330 oC.
The boiling point of lithium is 1342 °C. The boiling point of nitrogen is -195.79 °C.
Confuse spelling. The boiling point of lithium is at 1 342 0C. The boiling point of water (At 760 mm col. Hg) is 100 0C.
The boiling point of Lithium is 1342°C , 2448°F.
Lithium: (Li) Melting point 453.69 K (180.54 °C, 356.97 °F) Boiling point 1615 K (1342 °C, 2448 °F)
The boiling point of lithium is 1342 0C. The melting point of lithium is 180,54 0C.
1347 oC
Lithium (Li) Melting point: 453.69 K, 180.54 °C, 356.97 °F Boiling point: 1615 K, 1342 °C, 2448 °F
LiCl is the formula for lithium chloride.The boiling point of lithium chloride is 1,382 degrees Celsius.That would be 2,519.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
Lithium boils at about 1342°C (about 2448°F).
The boiling point of lithium is 1 342 0C (1 615 K).