Mercury and Bromine are liquid at room temperature. H He N O F Ne Cl Ar Kr Xe Ra are gas at room temperature.All others are solid.
At room temperature, all metals except for mercury are solids. Mercury is a rare metal that is liquid at room temperature due to its low melting point.
All Metals except Hg (Mercury) are solids at room temperature.
some aren't Mercury is one metal that is liquid at room temperature.
no not all metallic are solid at room temperature.
With the exception of mercury and bromine, which is a liquid, metals are solid at room temperature.
Most metals are solids at room temperature. They're not liquids, and they're certainly not gases. Mercury is the only metal that is a liquid in this temperature range. There are 5 metals that are liquid at or close to room temperature. Cesium, Francium, Gallium, Rubidium, and Mercury.Almost all metals are solid at Room temperature and Pressure, except for Mercury, which is a liquid.
Excepting mercury all metals are solids at room temperature.
Zinc and mercury are solids at room temperature, whereas oxygen and bromine are gases.
Mercury is the only one of the four metals that's a liquid at room temperature. The others are solids.
most of the elements are solids at room temperature.
All of them except for Mercury, Hydrogen, Helium, Chlorine, Fluorine, Argon, Krypton, Xenon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Radon, and possibly Francium.
except for mercury all metals are in a solid state at room temperature; mercury is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature. Explanation: Most metals have strong intermolecular forces that keep them solid at normal temperatures, but mercury has a unique structure that allows it to be liquid at room temperature.