Metals can be pulled or drawn into a wire, so gold is an example.
Ductile.
Compression
Ductility
ductility
'Ductile". (Normally applied to substances, not objects.)
Ductile
a ductile material is one that can be pulled out ,or drawn,into a long wire.
A substance that can be drawn into wire is indeed called ductile
true
Helium is not ductile. Helium is a gas, and ductile refers to metals, and basically is the ability to be drawn or pulled into a thin wire. Clearly, helium cannot be pulled into a thin wire.
It is because the stone and wood is too strong for wire to be pulled out.
A substance is considered to be ductile, if it can be hammered out thin or drawn into a wire.
You could try, but nonmetals are very brittle, so the wire would probably break.
Metal that can be pulled into a wire is ductile. The most ductile metal is gold.Copper (or alloys containing great amounts of copper) and aluminum (alloys) are the most common electric conductors with silver, gold and other rare metals used for specific purposes.Various iron alloys are made into cable wire that are to withstand high tensile loads.
Ductility, the property of a substance to be drawn out into a thin wire is a physical property associated with some metals, such as gold, silver and copper.
The ability to be drawn into a thin wire is a property known as ductility. Iron has ductility.
Jem could not escape because his pants were pulled taut in the wire fence.