- Climb - Climb with difficulty - Scramble - Soft silver-white element - To climb with difficulty, or with hands and feet; --
also used figuratively. - The act of clambering. - To ascend by climbing with difficulty.
- Battery element - Biblical sea-monster - Camera battery metal - Element, Li - Soft silver-white element - A metallic element of the alkaline group, occurring in
several minerals, as petalite, spodumene, lepidolite, triphylite, etc.,
and otherwise widely disseminated, though in small quantities.
- Element with symbol Ba - Metallic element - Silvery-white element - Silvery-White Metallic Element - Soft silvery-white element - One of the elements, belonging to the alkaline earth group;
a metal having a silver-white color, and melting at a very high
temperature. It is difficult to obtain the pure metal, from the
facility with which it becomes oxidized in the air. Atomic weight, 137.
Symbol, Ba. Its oxide called baryta.
- A supposed new metallic element. It is said to have been
discovered in pyrites, and some other minerals, and to be of a
silver-white color, and malleable.
- A rare element of the chromium group, occurring in
nature in the minerals molybdenite and wulfenite, and when reduced
obtained as a hard, silver-white, difficulty fusible metal. Symbol Mo.
Atomic weight 95.9.
- A rare metallic element. It occurs quite widely, but in
small quantities, and always combined. It is isolated as a soft
yellowish white metal, analogous to potassium in most of its
properties. Symbol Rb. Atomic weight, 85.2.
- A metal; a US 5-cent piece - American five cent coin - American five cent piece - Metal, Ni - Metallic element - Silvery-white metal - U.S. coin that is worth five cents
- A rare element, recently discovered (1885), in a silver
ore (argyrodite) at Freiberg. It is a brittle, silver-white metal,
chemically intermediate between the metals and nonmetals, resembles
tin, and is in general identical with the predicted ekasilicon. Symbol
Ge. Atomic weight 72.3.
- A rare nonmetallic element, analogous to sulphur and
selenium, occasionally found native as a substance of a silver-white
metallic luster, but usually combined with metals, as with gold and
silver in the mineral sylvanite, with mercury in Coloradoite, etc.
Symbol Te. Atomic weight 125.2.