Yes. It is covalent
Covalent
No, it is not.
Ionic
1
no. they will form covalent bond
All of the selenium fluoridesSeF4, SeF6, SeF2, and Se2F2 are covalent
Bases can be both ionic and covalent in nature.
Covalent bonds of all types are directional in nature.
Nonmetals produce covalent molecules.
The bonding in ammonium boron flouride involves ionic bonds between the positively charged ammonium ion (NH4+) and the negatively charged boron fluoride ion (BF4-), as well as covalent bonds within the boron fluoride ion.
Fluoride(not flouride)is a chemical commenly found in toothpaste
Flouride is not pison in the water jug if it was why would they sell it then