Diamond is highly shiny, prestigious and hard and is 100% carbon.
Carbon is dull.
no no
no
The carbon allotrope 'diamond' in its natural un-cut state is dull. however, when a jeweller cuts it , it becomes very shiny; a' girls best friend'. Other allotropes of carbon are graphite - dull, and buckminster fullerene ??? dull or shiny.
No it isnt carbon monoxide is carbon bonded to one oxygen atom,but carbon dioxide have two
Gold is a very shiny metal as it is a unreactive metal. Silver, Stainless steel, copper, aluminium, brass and platinum are also shiny metals. x
Pure boron (a metalloid) is not found in nature. Boron will be combined with something else. Pure boron could be shiny, but will usually be a brown powder when combined with carbon.
Shiny
The carbon allotrope 'diamond' in its natural un-cut state is dull. however, when a jeweller cuts it , it becomes very shiny; a' girls best friend'. Other allotropes of carbon are graphite - dull, and buckminster fullerene ??? dull or shiny.
Shiny
carbon
Only as a diamond crystal.
No it isnt carbon monoxide is carbon bonded to one oxygen atom,but carbon dioxide have two
Carbon
No; think of carbon. This is a non-metallic element; it exists in the forms of diamond and graphite - both "shiny" substances.
Pure boron (a metalloid) is not found in nature. Boron will be combined with something else. Pure boron could be shiny, but will usually be a brown powder when combined with carbon.
It is a shiny, hard, grayish-white metalloid in the carbon group, chemically similar to tin and silicon.
I guess you are referring to the shiny metallic appearance when you say 'silver' Carbon is not silver in appearance. Sulphur is not silver in appearance. Both Carbon and Sulphur are elements.
Gold is a very shiny metal as it is a unreactive metal. Silver, Stainless steel, copper, aluminium, brass and platinum are also shiny metals. x
Pure boron (a metalloid) is not found in nature. Boron will be combined with something else. Pure boron could be shiny, but will usually be a brown powder when combined with carbon.