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A metal is classified as a ferrous metal if it has steel in it , tip (if a magnet sticks to a metal, it is ferrous) A metal is classified as a non-ferrous metal if it has no steel in it, tip (if a magnet does not stick to a metal, it is non-ferrous) Non-ferrous metals: Brass Copper Nickel Tin Ferrous metals: Steel Iron
You could use a magnet to separate a collection of metal objects from a tomb. Iron object and other ferrous metals will stick to the magnet while some other types of metals will not.
You put them in the toy for the child to stick the toy to metal objects... magnets are the same no matter what you put them in, even avocados.
everything in the universe that is made out of matter is has some sort of charge. This charge can be positive, negative or neutral. A magnet is usually a highly positively charged and metal tend to be highinly negitivli charged. So the oppisites attatract each other creating a "polar' effect.
between the stick and water
you get a metal hanger bend it so its stright stick it through the plastic between the window and the medal and flip the lock up
you stick a hanger through the window
shish kabob
No, NOT ALL metal does stick to all other metal.
A metal coat hanger with the end bent over to avoid tearing the line. Now just stick that up in the line until i flows clear.
The walking stick looks like a green stick so it can sit in any plant live and not be noticed. The walking stick looks like a green stick so it can sit in any plant live and not be noticed.
That metal stick is called led
No how can that be... if it can stick to steel and steel is meatal than it can stick to metal.
You can stick it to metal.
Pin
the magnet it could stick together becaus esomehow the metal attracts the magnet and it makes pulls the metal material and stick to it
it depends on what metal it is