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At room temperature, there are 11 gases, and they are hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, and all 6 inert gases, helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon and radon. It is Mercury and bromine that are liquids at room temperature (in the 70s Fahrenheit or Celsius). Rubidium, cesium, gallium, and francium are liquids in room temperature for tropical parts of the world with no AC. All the rest of the elements are solids.

There are 92 naturally occurring elements (Hydrogen through Uranium minus the manmade Technetium), though a case could be made for the smallest amounts of plutonium showing up in uranium ores, which would make 92. Several elements beyond these have been synthesized, and have modestly long half-lives. None of them have any stable isotopes, of course. And all of these elements are solids at room temperature as far as we know. Copernicium is likely a liquid, but that has not been proven.

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13y ago

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