it can be both ... your question needs to be constructed better ...
Iodine is a nonmetal but it can be found in solid forms. Iodine experiences sublimation which is the transition from solid to gas, therefore it skips the liquid form.
Iodine is a solid at room temperature and pressure, so it does not produce sound waves like a liquid or gas would. Sonorous refers to the ability to produce sound when struck, so iodine would not be considered sonorous.
Solid
Xenon is a non-metal, an inert (or noble) gas. Xenon is not a metal
Meitnerium is a synthetic element that is a solid metal. It is classified as a transactinide element and is highly radioactive, with a very short half-life. Meitnerium does not occur naturally and is produced artificially in particle accelerators.
hydrogen is a non metal and will always stay a gas.
Oxygen is a gas at room temperature. It becomes a liquid at -183oC and a solid at -218.8oC.
Bromine is yhe only non-metal which is neither solid nor gas at room temperature.
This varies depending upon which nonmetal you are asking about. Chlorine is a gas at room temperature, but bromine is a liquid and carbon is a solid.
Nonmetals can be solid, liquid and gas at room temperature.
No, Because it is a gas not a solid or liquid.
A non-liquid substance is a material that is not in a liquid state, such as a solid or a gas.
Non-metals typically exist in solid or gas phases at room temperature, with some non-metals like iodine and bromine being in a liquid phase. Examples of non-metals in the solid phase include sulfur, carbon, and phosphorus.
The same as with non-metals. The temperature at which liquid turns to gas, or gas to liquid.
Uranium is a solid metal; the non-oxydated surface of a uranium piece is lustrous, very similar with the aspect of steels.
Iodine is a nonmetal but it can be found in solid forms. Iodine experiences sublimation which is the transition from solid to gas, therefore it skips the liquid form.
Yes: wave a metal detector over the sample. If nothing happens, it's a non metal.