Comparing metals and non- metals
Property MetalsNon-metals Appearance Usually shiny (lustrous) Usually dull Hardness Usually hard Usually soft or brittle Malleability Can be hammered into sheets Cannot be hammered; they break Ductility Can be drawn into wires Cannot be drawn into wires Conductivity Good conductors of heat and electricity Poor conductors of heat and electricity Sound Make a ringing sound when hit (sonorous) Do not make a ringing sound StateMostly solids (except mercury) Can be solid, liquid, or gas Examples Iron, copper, aluminium Oxygen, carbon, sulfur
Metals → shiny, strong, conduct electricity
Non-metals → dull, weak, do not conduct electricity
Most magnets are made of metals, but a magnet itself is not a type of metal.
Many magnets are made from metals like iron, nickel, or cobalt.
These metals are called magnetic metals because magnets stick to them.
A magnet is an object that produces a magnetic force, not a kind of material by itself.
Example:
An iron nail is a metal but not always a magnet.
A magnet is often made from metal and can attract metal objects.
Are magnets metals?
A magnet is usually made from metal, but a magnet itself is not a type of metal.
A magnet is something that creates a magnetic force.
Metals are materials, like iron or copper.
Metals that can become magnets
Some metals can turn into magnets:
Iron → very magnetic
Nickel → magnetic
Cobalt → magnetic
These are called magnetic metals.
Metals that are NOT magnetic
Some metals are not attracted to magnets:
Aluminium
Copper
Gold
Silver
So not all metals are magnets.
Metal = what something is made of
Magnet = something that can attract certain metals
Example:
An iron nail → metal (not always a magnet)
A fridge magnet → magnet (made from metal inside)
1How magnets are related to metals
Most strong magnets are made using metal mixtures (like iron and steel).
The metal inside helps the magnet create a magnetic field (an invisible force around it).
That magnetic field is what pulls metal objects.
2. Can a metal become a magnet?
Yes! Some metals can turn into magnets if they are magnetized. For example:
An iron nail can become a temporary magnet if you rub a magnet on it.
But after some time, it may lose its magnetism.
3. Are all magnets metal?
Most magnets have metal inside.
But some magnets are covered with plastic or rubber on the outside.
Even if you see plastic, there is usually metal inside.
4. Why only some metals stick to magnets
Magnets only attract certain metals because of how their tiny particles are arranged.
Iron → sticks strongly
Nickel → sticks
Cobalt → sticks
Copper → does not stick
Aluminium → usually does not stick
5. Simple way to remember
Metals = materials
Magnets = objects that attract some metals
Some metals can be magnets


