Bluish-gray, usually. Sometimes white if fully oxidized.
The color of lead could be considered gray or a silver-like gray. Depending on how big it is, some people think that it has a bluish tint.
Lead is generally a silver or dark gray colour.
I wanted to synthesis lead chloride with lead acetate and potassium chloride in cold water, and I get white precipitation!
Metallic lead is a silver-gray color, shiny and with a slightly blue cast when freshly cut. It gradually dulls on exposure to air.
it is charcoalish silverish greyish
silver
Lead is a poor metal and (or) a metalloid: it has some amphoteric properties as well, like bismuth or arsenic. It has some fine metallic properties though.
"Sugar of lead" is lead acetate - Pb(CH3COO)2.
Lead
of course is it a metal.... for further details please refer any standard chemistry text books...
It is a white solid.
Lead is a metal.
Lead is a poor metal and (or) a metalloid: it has some amphoteric properties as well, like bismuth or arsenic. It has some fine metallic properties though.
This is inorganic chemistry.
Yes, lead is a metal.
Lead metal
Lead is a soft ductile metal.
Lead is a soft ductile metal.
Gold has a shiny yellow colour and copper has a pinkish colour but it appears brown, due to the reaction with oxygen. Some metals have a blackish colour like lead or iron. Some show bluish cast when exposed to light like osmium. Metal Niobium sometimes appears blue due to reactivity with oxygen. But most of the elements have silvery colour.
This is inorganic chemistry.
Lead (Pb) is a chemical element.
Pencil "lead" is not really lead, the metal - Pb. Pencils are made with graphite which is a mineral, an insulator.
Lead is a metal.