Look up "Periodic Table of elements." the elements on the left of the bold line and right are separated based on this.
It would be an Ionic Compound (metal/non-metal mixture) "SodiumChloride"
Sodium chloride is not a metal.
Common table salt NaCl is a metal halide.
Na, Sodium, from the Latin for natrium, is a metal
In sodium chloride (NaCl), there are no metal ions present. Sodium (Na) is a metal cation, and chloride (Cl) is a non-metal anion. When they combine to form NaCl, they do not exist as individual metal ions.
The metal is sodium, Na. In most compounds, the metal (if there is one) will come first, followed by the non-metal. NaCl is sodium chloride, more commonly known as table salt. It consists of one atom of sodium (a highly reactive alkali metal) and chlorine (a highly reactive non-metal halogen.)
Sodium chloride is a compound, not a chemical element.
Because sodium is a metal and chlorine is a non metal, it is ionically bonded.
CO2 It is a non metal + a non metal the rest are ionic bonds ie metal + non metal
Electrolysis of molten Sodium chloride(liquid NaCl), can be used to produce Sodium metal and Chlorine
NaCl - table salt (there are many salts) Na - Alkali metal Cl - Halogen
This metal is sodium (na); sodium chloride is NaCl.
Common table salt is NaCl I think, hence the metal of the salt will be sodium (Na)