It just is not true. Even iron is not naturally magnetic.
I'm pretty sure it's metallic but I might be wrong
A contradiction of a statement is a statement that proves the previous statement wrong.
no
Magnetism and electricity, though related, are different forces. They are not "the same"; though they are comparable in SOME aspects.
Nothing's wrong, except that it means elements X and Y are in fact the same element, if their atoms have the same number of electrons. --------- A more clear, correct and short answer: a neutral atom of an element can be isoelectronic only with an ionized atom of another element.
"The" 12 elements is wrong. There are over 100 elements.
We generally refer to these elements as semiconductors. There is something akin to a "diagonal line of elements" in the periodic table that separates the metals from the nonmetals. Elements on the left of this diagonal are metals, and elements on the right are nonmetals. The elements that make up this diagonal are boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, tellurium, polonium, and astatine, and they have both metallic and nonmetallic properties. awesome mean something good.
wrong statement
Myths
Its not a question its a statement
You might, but that would be wrong! Mercury has a strong magnetic field.
"see if a magnet sticks to it, if it does it is metallic" Wrong..... Not all metals are metallic. You could run an electric current through it to test for metals.