The terms "metal" and "nonmetal" are normally applied to elements, not compounds such as silver bromide.
Silver is a metal. It is a good conductor of heat and electricity and possesses metallic luster and ductility. It is not classified as a nonmetal or a metalloid.
it can be nonmetal because it is soluble in water..
No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
Bromide is the ion of the element bromine, which is a nonmetal.
Sodium bromide is an ionic compound because it is composed of a metal cation (sodium) and a nonmetal anion (bromide) held together by ionic bonds.
No, bromide is not a metal. It is a chemical compound that contains the element bromine, which is a nonmetal. Bromide ions are formed when bromine gains an electron to achieve a stable electronic configuration.
Silver is a metal.
Magnesium bromide is a compound and not an element. So question of metal or nonmetal does not arise witch is applied to elements only.
Silver is a metal. It is a good conductor of heat and electricity and possesses metallic luster and ductility. It is not classified as a nonmetal or a metalloid.
it can be nonmetal because it is soluble in water..
No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
Bromide is the ion of the element bromine, which is a nonmetal.
Sodium bromide is an ionic compound because it is composed of a metal cation (sodium) and a nonmetal anion (bromide) held together by ionic bonds.
Metal, 1) its silvery (shiny) and it is a solid, and all metals are solids, with one exceptiuon mercury. Remember that a few metals are not silvery such as copper, gold. And some metals are soft, such as sodium, gallium, indium, potassium.
Silver is a metal and under normal circumstances, a solid.
Silver nitrate is a compound that is composed of a metal (silver) and nonmetal (nitrate) elements. Silver is a metal because it is a good conductor of electricity, whereas nitrate is a nonmetal as it typically forms negative ions in chemical reactions.
Copper II bromide is considered ionic because it is composed of a metal (copper) and a nonmetal (bromine). Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons between the metal and nonmetal atoms, resulting in the formation of positively and negatively charged ions that are held together by electrostatic forces.