Hydrogen is an element, not a bond. It can form bonds, which are usually covalent, but an ionic bond with hydrogen is possible, for example, lithium hydride is an ionic compound. While this, like every compound, does have its own distinctive features, I would not call it a special form of ionic bond.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen bond covalently.
Covalent bond
Ionic
The answer is Yes and No: Yes, ionic bond in (strong) acids like HCl. No, in CH4 methane they all are covalent bonds
Only sodium and chlorine will form ionic bond. the other pair given here will form covalent bond
No. Hydrogen and oxygen bond covalently.
No. They form a covalent bond.
Covalent bond
Ionic
Hydrogen bonds with hydrogen bond acceptor atoms such as Oxygen. Covalent bonds with nearly anything.
They form an ionic bond, i believe, because potassium is a metal and hydrogen is a nonmetal...
By ionic bond, covalent bond, coordinate bond and hydrogen bond
Only sodium and chlorine will form ionic bond. the other pair given here will form covalent bond
The answer is Yes and No: Yes, ionic bond in (strong) acids like HCl. No, in CH4 methane they all are covalent bonds
Fluorine atoms have a covalent bond between each other to form a covalent molecule. Fluorine bonded to a metal will have ionic bonds. Fluorine bonded to a non-meatl will have polar covalent bonding.
hydrogen sulfide
They do not have any bonds in common. Calcium and chlorine atoms form an ionic bond and hydrogen and nitrogen form a polar covalent bond.