Water.
Nonmetal elements at room temperature are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine and the noble gasses which are all gasses and bromine which is a liquid.
Bromine is yhe only non-metal which is neither solid nor gas at room temperature.
The group 5A non-metal that is a solid at room temperature is phosphorus with the symbol P.
At room temperature, it is solid, and it isn't a metal, so yes.
hydrogen is a non metal and will always stay a gas.
Boron is a solid at room temperature, making it a solid state of matter.
No, oxygen is a gas at room temperature. (Also, oxygen is a nonmetal at any state)
Beryllium is an alkaline earth metal.
Phosphorus is a solid at room temperature.
No, not all non-metals are soft solids at room temperature. Non-metals can exist in various forms such as gases (e.g., oxygen), liquids (e.g., bromine), and solid (e.g., sulfur). The physical state of a non-metal at room temperature can vary depending on factors like temperature and pressure.
There are many non metals with different states m8
This varies depending upon which nonmetal you are asking about. Chlorine is a gas at room temperature, but bromine is a liquid and carbon is a solid.
Oxygen is a gas at room temperature. It becomes a liquid at -183oC and a solid at -218.8oC.