No, Magnesium is a solid metal, melting at 922 K.
Magnesium is a solid at room temperature.The only metal that is a liquid at room temperature is Mercury.
Magnesium is in the state of a solid form.
Magnesium is a solid at room temperature. It is a shiny metal with a silvery-white color that can be found in various forms such as powder, flakes, and solid blocks.
It becomes a silvery white solid at room temperature.
At room temperature, magnesium chloride is a solid.
Magnesium is a solid metal at room temperature; it does have a liquid phase (pretty much everything does, at the right combination of temperature and pressure) but in order to obtain liquid magnesium you would have to heat it in the absence of oxygen (or water) since it will otherwise burn up rather than melt, when it is heated.
Magnesium is a solid at normal temperature and pressure.
Magnesium "MG" is a solid at room temperature.
Oils are liquid triglycerides, at room temperature that is.
propanone is liquid at room temperature
it is liquid at room temprature
Bromine exists as a liquid at the room temperature.