they form a salt
Atoms of non-metals usually gain or share electrons when they react with other atoms.
metals lose electrons when they react with a non-metal
Atoms of non-metals usually gain or share electrons when they react with other atoms.
Generally ionic compounds are formed.
A metal and a non metal. Two non metals. A metal and a metalloid.
Nonmetals gain electrons.
neutral Depends on the nonmetal. Fluorine reacts differentpy from boron.
Metals loss electrons and nonmetals gain electrons.
Sulfur doesn't react with water.
Non-metals typically form oxides when they react with oxygen. The resulting compounds are often acidic in nature.
Most of them do NOT react with water. Only fluorine and to some extend chlorine do. Actually the only good 'water reacting' group of elements is group 1: the alkali metals.
No reaction happens. Only way to get a reaction going is if you have two molecules with different Metals and Non-metals. Metals in this one are different but non-metals are not so no reaction.