Lithium: Batteries
Iron: cars
Aluminum: airplanes
Nickel: coins
Lead: car batteries
Uranium: nuclear reactors
Titanium: lightweight cooking materials
Chromium: chrome plated items
Sodium: table salt
Zinc: core of pennnies
A grammatical term which describes a list which uses commas to separate its parts.
Metals, Non-metals and Metaloids
Beats me, the National Electrical Code does not list a #9 awg wire.
* Lights. * Appliances. * Heating/air conditioning. * Security systems. * Traffic control.
The simplest way is probably to read the numbers into an array and then prints each element of the array starting at the last one and moving backwards.
Hydrogen, helium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, phosphorus and sulfur are ten non metals in the order of increasing atomic number.
list ecological instrument with thier images
uses of alkali
Ten metals are platinum, GOLD, Silver, Tin, Mercury, Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Iron and Lead. Though there are many more metals than 10.
The metals highest on the list are the least stable.
carbon, bromine, phosphorus, sulphur
oven trays are the metals found at home.
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List five uses of permanent stitches
It's basically an indication of what metals are capable of displacing others. There's a list called the "reactivity series", and any metal on the list will displace anything lower on the list and be displaced by anything higher on the list.
No. Most of the metals listed are not transition metals and most transition metals are not in the list.
AdamantiumAluminumAntimonyArsenicBariumBerylliumBismuthBoronbronzeCadmiumCesiumChromiumCobaltCopperGalliumGermaniumGoldHafniumIndiumIridiumIronLeadLithiumMagnesiumManganeseMercuryMolybdenumNickelPlatinumPalladiumRhodiumOsmiumRutheniumRheniumRubidiumScandiumSeleniumSilverStrontiumTantalumTelluriumThalliumThoriumTinTitaniumTungstenUraniumVanadiumZincZirconium