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Compounds are made of bonding few elements. They could not have same properties as its component elements. They could have completely different properties.
Not necessarily anything like those of the elements.
All compounds are made out of atoms of the same element or differed elements.
No two elements have the same properties.
a compound composed of all the same elements would be a pure element. not a compound! a compound is when there is 2 or more atoms chemically bonded together. different compounds do have similar properties - they all have 2 or more atoms of elements chemically bonded together and they often react in similar way too.
the compound has properties that are different from the two elements the bonded, as it is a new substance
the properties of a compound are not the same as the elements that form them.
True. Compounds do not have the same properties as the elements that form them.
True. Compounds do not have the same properties as the elements that form them.
Compounds are made of bonding few elements. They could not have same properties as its component elements. They could have completely different properties.
No. They can have radically different properties from the elements they're formed from.Easy example: Sodium chloride. Sodium is a highly reactive nonmetal. Chlorine is a highly reactive nonmetal. They combine into a very nonreactive compound - table salt.
Not, it is not a correct answer.
A compound. Depending on the elements combined, the compound may or may not have the same characteristics as the original elements.
Not necessarily anything like those of the elements.
All compounds are made out of atoms of the same element or differed elements.
No two elements have the same properties.
They normally have new properties as a compound, example- sodium metal, extremely reactive, reacts violently with moisture; and chlorine gas, deadly poisonous, react together to form table salt-sodium chloride