No. Noble gases, halogens, and nonmetals are on the right side of the Periodic Table. Metals including, alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, and transition metals are all located on the left/center.
Nonmetals are located in the right corner of the periodic table of Mendeleev. See the link bellow for a periodic table. What? The nonmetals are located on the right of the periodic table, such as oxygen, nitrogen and chlorine.
metals on left, non-metals on right, some others in middle.
In the periodic table metals are on the left of the line. But elements touching it are called semi metals and have properties of both metals and nonmetals
Non-metals are placed at the right hand side of the periodic table.
Metals are located in the left hand side of the periodic table, non metals are located on the right and metalloids are located in between as a 'bridge'.
The metalloids split the table these are a diagonal group of elements, B, Si, Ge, As, Sb and Te. To their right are the non metals to the left the metals. There are many more metals than any other type of element. See Wikipedia article "Periodic table (metals and non metals)"
The periodic table comprises of metals (on the left) ,non-metals(on the right ) and transition elements (between metals and non-metals) in the periodic table.
in periodic table metals are present on left and non metals are present on the right ...
Non-metals and metalloids are found to the right on the periodic table.
Metals are placed at the left. Non-metals are placed at right in periodic table.
Nonmetals are located in the right corner of the periodic table of Mendeleev. See the link bellow for a periodic table. What? The nonmetals are located on the right of the periodic table, such as oxygen, nitrogen and chlorine.
Non-metals are located on the very right of the Periodic Table. Metals are on the left.
They occupy all but the top right corner of the table.
its the right side
Semi metals are present in zig-zag line in periodic table. It is towards right in periodic table.
Non-metals are found on the right side of the periodic table.
There is a stair in the Periodic Table running along groups 13 to 17. The elements on the stairs are metalloids whereas the elements to its right are non-metals. Metals lie on the left side of the stairs.