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Silver.
Characteristics: soft, lustrous, metal that is stable in oxygen or water Uses: jewelry, money, and silverware
No, it is not an adverb. Silver is a noun for a color or metal element (or silverware), and is also used as an adjective.
Pure gold is just that: gold. However, when used for jewelry or coins, it usually has copper mixed in for better durability.
No. Coins are not a single metal but alloys. An element can contain only 1 species of molecule.
NAICS Code 332812 (Metal Coating, Engraving, and Allied Services (except Jewelry and Silverware) to Manufacturing)
Silver is a type of metal. It is used for jewelry, utensils, coins, and much, much more!
No, coins are not an element. Some coins may be made of nearly pure gold, silver, aluminum, or other metal elements, but most present-day coins are made of various metal alloys, often with different composition on the inside than on the outside.
Silver is a very common metal. It is found in many different things ranging from jewelry, silverware, serving dishes, trinket boxes and stemware.
Coins are metal alloys which is a mixture of metals and non metals.
Gold is an element. Its Atomic number is 79. Its a metal and is the same color as you find it in jewelry and in gold mines.
While it is now never used in currency, the metal silver is used in jewellery and photography.