NO!!!!
There are Metalloids, Non-Metals, Liquids and Gases.
Here are some examples.
Metal ; Iron(Fe)
Metalloid ; Germanium (Ge)
Non-metal ; Sulphur(S)
Liquid ; Mercury(Hg) (And a metal).
Gas ; Fluorine(F)
All Non-Metals are poor conductor of electricity.
The organization of the elements (metals, non-metals, and semi-metals) which is known as the Periodic Table Of Elements.
The vast majority of elements in the periodic table can be classified as metals. Metals make up the s-block, d-block, and f-block of the periodic table. There are even a few elements in the p-block with metallic properties called metalloids.
The elements listed are Group 1 elements, the Alkali metals. They include lithium (Li), sodium (Na), potassium (K), rubidium (Rb), caesium (Cs) and francium (Fr). Use the link below to check facts and learn more.
If you're talking about categorisation that broad, then there are two categories:MetalsNon-metals
All metals except alloys of metals are elements, but not all elements are metals.
All pure metals are chemical elements; alloys are not elements.
All metals are elements.
All metals are chemical elements.
All you have to do is look on your periodic table of elements. Metals are to the left and non-metals are to the right. This way we know group four are metals.
The metals outnumber the non-metals by a good margin.
All the elements in the d block are metals. Elements in the groups 1 and 2 are also metals. The p block contains metals, non metals and metalloids.
elements
They are all elements, specifically metals.
No, all elements on the periodic table cannot be classified as either metals or nonmetals. Some elements, known as metalloids, have properties that fall between those of metals and nonmetals. These elements are typically found along the zigzag line on the periodic table.
All the metals.
They lose electrons, not elements. These are metals. Group I metals (IA or alkali metals), Group 2 metals (IIA or alkaline earth metals), transition metals (groups 3 thru 12), and all other metals.