Most Ionically bonded substances are solid, this makes me assume that Rubbing alcohol has covalent bonds.
Polar Covalent
covalent
This is an ionic compound.
Covalent; 2 non-metals bonded are covalent; a metal and a non-metal are ionic
CsBr is both polar and ionic, but is not covalent.
It is ionic.
Covalent
Rubbing alcohol, isopropanol, or isopropyl alcohol does not conduct electricity on its own, but might if something is dissolved in it. Rubbing alcohol is a covalent/molecular compound (an alcohol to be specific) and, therefore, cannot become an electrolyte like, for example, table salt. Electrolytes only come from ionic compounds, not covalent or molecular.
Polyvinyl alcohol has covalent bonds.
All the bonds in isopropyl alcohol are covalent.
Isopropyl solution (aka, rubbing alcohol) is not an ionic solution. Isopropanol is a covalent molecule made of non-metals: carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen (C3H8O).
Ethyl alcohol is held together by covalent bonds.
Covalent bond. Ethyl alcohol is the archaic name for ethanol (CH3CH2OH) This is the alcohol that is drunk by humans in alcoholic drinks.
It is bonded entirely covalently.
This is an ionic compound.
ionic
Ionic
It is ionic
A nonbinary ionic compound. Covalent bonds are molecular - nonmetal.