Yes. (person, place or thing & it IS a thing)
"Shilling" is a noun and refers to a silver or cupro-nickel coin used by many countries.
The metal nickel is named the same in French: "le nickel" (masculine noun). The English sense "five-cents coin" has no use in France, and would probably need to be clarified except for French-speaking Canadians. Nickel is also used in informal French as an adjective, meaning "spick and span".
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.Example: "Christmas Eve afternoon we scrape together a nickel and go to the butcher's to buy Queenie's traditional gift, a good beef bone."The appositive in the sentence is the noun phrase a good beef bone, which renames the noun 'gift'.
No, the nouns quarter, dime, and nickel are common nouns; a word for a quarter of anything; any quarter, dime, or nickel.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:The Quarter Jack Surgery, Wimborne, Dorset, UKDime Box, TX 77853Quarter Horse Drive, Henderson, NV or Nickel Street, Union City, CADime Magazine (basketball), New York, NY"Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America" by Barbara Ehrenreich
Yes. It consists of nickel, nickel, and nickel.
The chemical compound name for NiCO3 is nickel carbonate.
By itself or part of an alloy consisting of other metals. It can be also used as a compound - nickel (III) oxide - typically used in one specific type of rechargeable batteries (nickel-cadmium; NiCd)
It is made of copper and nickel. A 1949 NICKEL is made from copper & nickel.
This is a nickel phosphide. There are a number of nickel phosphides 8 in all - this is the most nickel rich phase.
when mining and refining nickel in WA , is this process the same as ultramafic nickel
If it is a US nickel, it is 25% nickel, 75% copper. If it is a Canadian nickel I believe it is 100% nickel.
25% of of the element nickel is inside a united states money nickel.