By a sufficient input of energy.
Molecular and covalent bonds aren't really the same. It is chemical bonds that hold molecules together. These chemical bonds might be called molecular bonds, and they come in two basic flavors: ionic bonds and covalent bonds. A molecular bond might be covalent, but it might be ionic, and that's the difference.
Yes that is Correct
Ionic bonds are stronger.
XeF4 is a molecular compound. It is composed of xenon and fluorine atoms held together by covalent bonds.
Covalent bonds, they are stronger than the rest of the options.
Glucose is a molecular compound, not ionic. It consists of covalent bonds between its carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms.
Phosphorus - covalent network Argon - covalent molecular
"Bonds" do not "have" bonds, because they are bonds themselves. The questioner may have meant to ask, "Molecular compounds have what type of bonds?", and the answer to that question is "covalent bonds".
The bonds are called covalent molecular bonds.
Covalent Bonds
Ammonia (NH3) has covalent molecular bonds because the nitrogen and hydrogen atoms share electrons to form a stable molecule. Covalent bonds are formed through the sharing of electrons between atoms.
Breaking covalent bonds requires input of energy, not the release of energy. When covalent bonds are broken, energy is absorbed by the molecules involved in the process.