Carbohydrates.
Compounds that contain carbon-hydrogen bonding are collectively termed organic compounds. These are simply compounds that would contain hydrogen and carbon elements.
Carbohydrates are macro molecules made by bonding a large number of glucose molecules. They are organic compounds. They contain elements Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
The general term hydrocarbons is applied to compounds containing carbon-hydrogen bonds (and only the elements hydrogen and carbon). The basic string starts like this: methane (CH4), ethane (C2H6), propane (C3H8), .... Check out the Wikipedia post on hydrocarbons. You'll find a link to their article below.
Covalent bonding is typical of organic compounds which do not contain metal. Metals form either metallic or ionic bonds.
No, while some organic compounds can form hydrogen bonds, these bonds are not inherently organic. Hydrogen bonds occur where hydrogen is bonded to a highly electronegative element such as oxygen or nitrogen. Organic compounds must contain carbon, which is not related to hydrogen bonding.
A mixture is an association of elements and compounds but without chemical bonding. Compugs contain chemical elements chemically bonded. An element contain the same type of atoms, including isotopes.
Compounds that contain no carbon are inorganic.
Ununquadium don't contain compounds.
No, aerosols do not contain chlorine compounds.
Organic compounds contain carbon.
Organic substances contain carbon and hydrogen atoms. Organic compounds are formed by bonding carbon and hydrogen atoms. There can be more elements too. An atom can never be organic.
All organic compounds contain carbon; most inorganic compounds doesn't contain carbon.