All salts contain as a cation a metal (or ammonium).
All metals form salts.
Halogens are highly reactive and readily form salts with metals.
Types of bonding: ionic (in salts), covalent (in organic compounds), metallic (in metals).
The family that combines with metals to form salts is the halogen family. There are other nonmetals that can be mixed with metals to form salts, but halogens are the most common.
Alkali metals exist only as salts.
By the reaction of some metals with acids salts are obtained.
All types of metals form salts.
All metals form salts.
All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
Halogens are highly reactive and readily form salts with metals.
Metals form salts often.
Those salts which can dissolve in water.because water is a solvent and salts are solute.
Halogens are not salts but they are chemical elements; halogens can form salts reacting with metals.
Aluminum and magnesium are the two metals in greatest volume that are produced by electrolyzing their molten salts.
Metals and ammonium form generally salts.
The majority of elements, and especially metals form salts.
Metals form salts.