metalloids like titanium and gold, in the center of the periodic table (im only 13 and i knew that)
Metals are generally shiny (fresh, not oxidized or dirty surface).
Metallic elements are usually shiny.
Metals
The shiny surface is a reflector, to reflect the heat outwards towards you.
A shiny surface reflects 'more' light than a matt surface.
A matte surface is non-reflective. It is the opposite of shiny.
Enamel
if they didn't you couldn't see them
Because shiny surfaces are poor emitters of radiation and therefore, no heat will be lost to the surroundings, just reflected off the shiny surface back to the toast.
Metallic elements are usually shiny.
A fresh surface of iron is shiny.
Fresh mercury surface is shiny.
The shiny surface is a reflector, to reflect the heat outwards towards you.
No.
silver shiny
A fresh surface of zirconium is shiny.
A shiny surface reflects 'more' light than a matt surface.
Manu metals have a shiny fresh surface.
A clean surface of pure uranium has a metallic appearance, as a steel.
Metallic elements that are shiny and ductile would include aluminium, silver, and gold. [Lead is ductile, but not shiny. Chromium is shiny, but not ductile.]