The inert or noble gases are on the far side of the periodic table in group 18. Nitrogen is not a noble gas nor in that group. You give three choices, inert, nonreactive, and reactive. Essentially, "inert" and "nonreactive" are the same thing. Even if you didn't know the answer to this question on a test, you can automatically eliminate these choices since they are the same answer, and they both can't be correct (assuming this is multiple choice). So that leaves you with reactive, which nitrogen actually is. Most commonly, nitrogen will just react with another atom of nitrogen (triple bonded in case you're interested).
Oxygen is a rather chemically active element.
When the octet of the element is complete it achieves stability and is considered as inert.
It will react -it can be fixed by legumes. It can be converted to ammonia in the Haber process etc. Overall, it is considered a non-reactive element.
The element oxygen is very reactive.
If the outer energy level is full, the element is said to be non reactive and inert. It is stable in nature.
This is radon, it has a full outer shell of electrons, so it is technically non reactive
Caesium is an extremely reactive chemical element.
A reactive non metal is an element that can gain the electrons or is more electronegative
Most non-metals are not highly reactive or an completely inert. However, the Halogens in Group 17 are reactive with nearly every substance on the planet.
If the outer energy level is full, the element is said to be non reactive and inert. It is stable in nature.
This is radon, it has a full outer shell of electrons, so it is technically non reactive
inert
Xenon is a noble gas. It is chemically inert (or non-reactive).
Nitrogen is an inert gas; it is non-reactive in chemical situations.
non-reactive with other substances. The term inert means non-reactive. We refer to gases as being chemically inert if their atoms don't combine with other atoms in chemical reactions.
Yes, inert gases like neon have zero oxidation numbers. This is why they are non-reactive.
Helium (He) is a noble (inert) gas placed in the group 18 of the Periodic Table.Helium falls in inert gas. It is stable and non-reactive.
No, inert gases are non-reactive, and in order to be a fuel source, a gas would need to be highly reactive.
Caesium is an extremely reactive chemical element.
Plutonium is a reactive chemical element.
The full octet means the element is inert (non-reactive.)