the only liquid halide is bromine
Bromine Br Atomic number 35. Number of protons-35 Neutrons-45. Electrons-35
Bromine is the only liquid element in Group 7 (also known as Group 17) of the periodic table. It is a reddish-brown volatile liquid at room temperature, and it is the only nonmetallic element that is liquid under normal conditions.
No element in Group II is a liquid at room temperature. The only elements that are liquid at room temperature are bromine, which is in Group VII, and mercury, which is a transition metal and Lord only knows how your book defines those, but it's almost certainly NOT Group II. (It could, conceivably, be Group IIB, though the whole thing of group numbers is one of the stupider concepts in chemistry, especially since there are at least three mutually incompatible ways of defining them.)
Bromine, group 17; Mercury, group 12. Both are liquids at STP
Bromine is the only nonmetal element that is a liquid at room temperature.
Bromine is a halogen element that is in liquid form at room temperature.
Bromine Br Atomic number 35. Number of protons-35 Neutrons-45. Electrons-35
Bromine is the only liquid element in Group 7 (also known as Group 17) of the periodic table. It is a reddish-brown volatile liquid at room temperature, and it is the only nonmetallic element that is liquid under normal conditions.
If you think to halogens (not halides) bromine is a liquid.
No element in Group II is a liquid at room temperature. The only elements that are liquid at room temperature are bromine, which is in Group VII, and mercury, which is a transition metal and Lord only knows how your book defines those, but it's almost certainly NOT Group II. (It could, conceivably, be Group IIB, though the whole thing of group numbers is one of the stupider concepts in chemistry, especially since there are at least three mutually incompatible ways of defining them.)
The ONLY liquid elements (at STP) areMercury, Hg, in group 12Bromine, Br, in group 17Notations like ia, iia, ib or iib are not commonly in use, maybe in older books or periodic tables.
Bromine, group 17; Mercury, group 12. Both are liquids at STP
Mercury is the only metal to be liquid at room temperature.
Bromine is the only nonmetal element that is a liquid at room temperature.
A halide is a compound consisting of two parts; a halogen and another electronegative element. The mostcommonhalogens arefluorine(F),chlorine(Cl),bromine(Br),iodine(I), andastatine(At). If put together with another element, they formfluoride,chloride,bromide,iodide, orastatide. Therefore, your question is not right since a halide consist of elements and one element can only be a halogen or non-halogen. (halogen and halide are two different things)
Bromine (Br) is a liquid at room temperature and is a non-metal. The only liquid element that is not a metal is Bromine (Br). There is one other element that occurs in liquid form and that is Mercury (Hg).
Mercury is the only metal that is liquid at standard conditions for temperature and pressure