All of them, when heated sufficiently. Mercury is a liquid at room temperature. Francium would probably be liquid at room temperature but it's too unstable to allow enough of it to be collected together to tell. Eka-mercury, or whatever they're calling it these days, is thought to also be likely to be a liquid at room temperature, again assuming you could collect more than an atom or two of it before it decayed into something else.
The only metallic element that is not solid at room temperature is mercury, which is a liquid.
Ice is non-metallic. It is simply water (H2O) in the solid state and contains no elements that are metallic.
Iron is the most metallic in nature among these three. Therefore, it has the most strongest metallic bonds
Metallic oxides
only non metals are acidic, covalent bonding only occurs between nonmetals, metallic bonding between metals. If it is shiny it is most likely a metal except unless it is a diamond or silicon. Also you can tell on the periodic table
The Sulfates mineral group typically contains one or several metallic elements
no
why metallic solids are soft to hard
no not all metallic are solid at room temperature.
Metallic solids are composed of individual atoms.
metallic bonds
Brittleness. Reason: Non-metallic solids are usually brittle.
yes, there are far more metallic elements than nonmetals.
Metallic
The solid carbon compounds are mostly molecular solids.
i8
The metals outnumber the non-metals by a good margin.
metallic elements are found in the center of the periodic table, and nonmetallic elements are anywhere but the middle...