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.)
group IIB elements (Zn Cd,Hg) don't have partially filled d-subshell either in elements or in their ionic ionic state, and neither they show typical properties of transition elements.... Elements of group IIIB are also non typically. From Lion Heart Baloh
Fast-twitch muscle fibers are primarily responsible for producing lactic acid during intense exercise. These fibers fatigue quickly but can generate energy rapidly through anaerobic metabolism, leading to lactic acid accumulation when oxygen supply is insufficient.
transition metals
yes, for the blood types there are 2 genes that decide ABO/+- the ABO is based on a gene with 3 genotypes, which are i, IA and IB if a person has ii, they have O blood, if they have iIA or IAIA they have A blood, if they have iIB or IBIB they have B blood and if they have IAIB they have AB blood positibe/negative is the rhesusfactor, it actually works with 3 genes(C, D, and E), but anything other than cde/cde will give rhesus-positive blood, so a parent with ii-cde/cde will have O-negative, and iIA/CDe/CDe will give A-positive, the only 2 blood-types the children can have with this set of parents are A-positive and O-positive
Mercury is in Group 12 (IIB). Its symbol is Hg.
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.
It is the first element in group 12 (IIB) of the periodic table.
it belongs to group 12 or IIB
The Zinc Family also known as group IIB is the second least reactive I believe. The least reactive family is the one with a full p sublevel, the noble gases, the next least reactive would be the family with a full d sublevel. Since group IIB has a full d sublevel, it must be the next least reactive family.
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.)
Stage IIB: Cancer has spread to the parametrial tissue adjacent to the cervix
breating
Survival drops in stage IIa to about 65% at five years and is worse yet for stage IIb at slightly over 50%.
Broad- or floating-betalipoproteinemiaCombined hyperlipidemia NOSElevated cholesterol with elevated triglycerides NECFredrickson's hyperlipoproteinemia, type IIb or IIIHyperbetalipoproteinemia with prebetalipoproteinemiaHypercholesteremia with endogenous hyperglyceridemiaHyperlipidemia, group CTubo-eruptive xanthomaXanthoma tuberosum
The Hope Diamond is a Type IIb diamond, classified as such based on it's "...very low levels of nitrogen impurities comparable to Type IIa diamonds, Type IIb diamonds contain significant boron impurities. Type IIb diamonds make up about 0.1% of all natural diamonds," according to Wikipedia.
the double I B charity (IIB)