Sure do. Gaseous nitrogen is bonded this way; one sigma and two pi bonds.
There can be multiple types of covalent bonds in a compound depending on the elements involved. Common types include single, double, and triple covalent bonds. These bonds differ in the number of shared electrons between atoms.
In covalent bonding, different types of bonds include single bonds, where one shared pair of electrons is involved, double bonds with two shared pairs of electrons, and triple bonds with three shared pairs of electrons. Additionally, coordinate covalent bonds form when one atom provides both electrons for the bond.
Nitrogen is a non-metal and when non-metals bond with each other, they from covalent bonds. Covalent bonds are bonds where electrons are shared. not only is Nitrogen a covalent bond, but it forms a triple bond due to the valence electrons attraction.
Elements like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen can form triple covalent bonds. These elements have enough valence electrons to share three pairs of electrons, resulting in the formation of a stable triple covalent bond.
A covalent bond is formed when electrons are shared between atoms. This type of bond is typically found in nonmetal elements and results in the formation of molecules. Covalent bonds are strong and can exist as single, double, or triple bonds depending on the number of shared electron pairs.
Carbon can form single covalent bonds, double covalent bonds, and triple covalent bonds. In a single covalent bond, carbon shares one pair of electrons with another atom. In a double covalent bond, carbon shares two pairs of electrons, and in a triple covalent bond, carbon shares three pairs of electrons.
Single, double, and triple covalent bonds
Valence electrons can come together to form single, double, or triple covalent bonds between atoms.
In a triple covalent bond there are three electron pairs. Examples are ethyne (acetylene) HCCH where the the triple bond is between the carbon atoms, and N2 where there is triple bond between the nitrogen atoms. A triple bond has sigma bond (electrons along the axis, and two pi bonds electrons around the axis. See link for a picture. Note wikipedia triple bond article INCORRECTLY says triple bonds common in phosphorus, so ignore that bit the rest is OK
Nitrogen can form single, double, and triple covalent bonds.
Covalent bonds do not "make up" anything; they merely hold the atoms that carry the mass of the substance together. If the questioner means, "How many covalent bonds are in a nitrogen molecule with formula N2" the answer is "one triple covalent bond."
All covalent bonds contain one sigma bond.