No. Sunlight is made up of different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. It's made up of Infrared, Ultraviolet A, B and C, visible light, Radio Waves, and X-rays. None of these actually contain atoms so therefore they can't be classed as matter, although some of them, e.g. Gamma Rays, the most dangerous of them, can seriously harm and even kill you if exposed to high doses of them, some quicker than others. They all travel at the speed of light. Elements, on the other hand have physical structure. They are the parts that make up the Periodic Table, e.g. Helium, Mercury, Tungsten, Iron, Gold and Neon. None of them can be made because they're the basic elements- the building blocks of the universe. Hope this has answered your question B)
it is the naughty one
Sunlight is not an element.
in sunny days
Garcia - Kalimba De Luna
there is 20g of sugar in sunny delight(12 tbs of sugar)
they receive a lot of rain each year but they are mostly sunny
Sunny
Sunny is an adjective. We say: A sunny day. A sunny disposition. The sunny side of the street. The adverb 'sunnily' has rare but specific uses.
'Sunny' is an adjective. 'Yesterday was sunny, whereas today is cloudy.' 'My sister has a very sunny personality.' 'Sunny' cannot be used as a verb.
The "s" in sunny, is a sound, if you are referring to sunny as in " it's so sunny outside" or a name as in " Sunny and I went to the mall". It just makes a "ess" sound.
in sunny days
"Sunny" can be written as เคธเคจเฅเคจเฅ in Hindi.
sunny
Sunny is used as an adjective in this sentence.
"Hay sol" is "there is sun" or "it is sunny." Sol can also mean sunny.
sunny
what5 happen to sunny
Sunny is a very good break dancer. Sunny has been mentioned in many magazines and many people know who Sunny is.
the comparative of sunny is sunnier and the superlative is sunniest