Tin (Sn)
You are probably referring to Vanadium, with an atomic weight of 50.9415
The metal tin. Sn is from the Latin word stannum.
Tin is not a transition metal.
Its a metal. Tin is a chemical element with symbol Sn (for Latin: stannum) and atomic number 50
Tin is a metal element. atomic number of it is 50.
Tin has two forms (allotropes) one is "white tin" (beta-tin) which is a metal although some chemists/metrial scientists would call it a "poor metal"- and "grey tin" (alpha-tin), a low temperature form, which has a similar structure to diamond and more covalent in character. So one allotrope is a metal and the other isn't. Probably the answer a school teacher expects is tin is metal.
Yes, tin, Sn (Stannum), is a pure metal element, atom number 50 in the Periodic Table.
We can find tin as a metal element. Atomic number of it is 50.
Tin is not a man made metal, tin is a chemical element. The chemical symbol of tin is Sn and it is atomic number 50 on the Periodic Table.
Metals are a class of elements. A pure metal is an element. Some metals are alloys, which mean they have more than one metal or element in them. The metal bronze is made of two elements, the metal tin and the metal copper.
Tin