Bromine forms bromide with metals.
covalent bonding. it is a diatomic molecule
Covalent bonding
Bromine is fairly common on Earth. Bromine is naturally found in the Earth's crust and in seawater.
The bonding order of bromine molecule is one.
An ionic bond
Br- is an anion formed by bromine by losing an electron. Here bromine is not bonded to any other atom and hence there is no bonding here
A nonpolar covalent bond, because the atoms are the same element.
That would be Bromide.
Anions are negative ions, so any element that gains a negative charge in a chemical reaction. Some examples of elements that commonly do this are the halogens (flourine, chlorine, bromine, iodine, astatine) and oxygen.
They are both liquid at room temperature.
all nonmetals
No, bromine exists in nature. It is common in seawater, and in underground aquifers that have been exposed to seawater in the "recent" past.