Able to be deformed by pressure without fracturing or breaking, such as clay, gold, or lead.
a term used to describe a material that can be pulled out into a long wire
No, concrete is not ductile
it is ductile. For hardened stainless steel it gets less ductile, but not brittle.
Yes, it is very ductile
Materials that are ductile, or have the property of ductility, will stretch and deform when they are pulled, rather than breaking. Gold, silver, copper, iron, and lead are common examples of ductile materials.
FLEXIBLE Easily Bent: Flexible, Supple, Bendable For Science Vocab: Ductile
what does prism mean in science language
its a science word
Yes according to my science teacher tin is ductile
Liquid Metal Embrittlement. Such as when the ductile properties of a metal or alloy change when subject to the presence of a liquid metal such as mercury.
Ductile.
"Doctile" is not a word. You may either mean 'docile' which is calm and obedient. or 'ductile' which means malleable..
The science word "key" means important or critical.
no
Maybe it will mean science stific word so I don't
Another word for ductile would be... -yielding -squashy -spongy -supple -pliable -elastic -malleable -flexible -bendable -limp
it means "science affect"