- METALS
- Alloy components
- Gold, platinum, and silver
- Gold, silver, and lead
- Alchemist's supply
- They're great conductors
- Silver and gold
- Iron and aluminum, e.g.
- Copper and iron, e.g.
- They can be precious
- Sodium and calcium, e.g.
- Brass and bronze
- Copper and cobalt
- Most are great conductors
- Precious items
- Gold and silver
- They may be noble or precious
- Bronze, iron, et al.
- Iron and zinc
- Nickel and cadmium
- Most of the periodic table
- Some recyclables
- Silver and copper
- Elemental category
- Scrap heap, perhaps
- What mints work with
- Alloys.
- Certain elements.
- Certain conductors.
- Silver, etc.
- Silver and gold, e.g.
- Silver, copper, etc.
- Bismuth and lithium
- Tin and zinc
- Basic materials
- Cadmium and tungsten
- Forge materials
- Mercury and others
- Lithium and others
- Some are precious
- Mint supplies
- Assayer's area of expertise
- Most are good conductors
- What the majority of elements are
- Precious or "heavy" things
- Elements with names ending in -ium, typically
- Approximately three-quarters of all known chemical elements
- Gold and iron
- Most elements on the periodic table
- Platinum and potassium
- They might be noble or base
- Components of alloys
- They make change
- Some conductors
- Many conductors
- Change materials
- About 80% of the elements in the period table
- Tin and tungsten