false
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Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. Not a bond.
NO!!! It is a weak bond between oxygen of a water molecule , and an hydrogen of another water molecule.
It is less strong than covalent bonds. , but stronger than Van der Waals forces
A covalent bond involves the sharing of electrons, while hydrogen bonding does not.
Covalent bond is a strong chemical bond. Hydrogen bonds are weak bonds.
It's a strong bond.
The bond between hydrogen and fluorine is polar covalent and it can exhibit hydrogen bonding.
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 chloride has a covalent bond.
A covalent bond involves the sharing of electrons, while hydrogen bonding does not.
No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
Hydrogen bonding.
covalent bonding
there is covalent bond in hydrogen sulfide.
Covalent bond is a strong chemical bond. Hydrogen bonds are weak bonds.
It's a strong bond.
it has hydrogen bond (H-O)
It depends really which kind of bonding you're talking about. If your talking about ionic, covalent and hydrogen bonds here are some examples but don't exactly use these: Ionic Bonding An ionic bond is like a boy and girl. Covalent Bonding A covalent bond is like playing with a ball. Hydrogen Bonding Hydrogen Bonding is like picking lab partners. -From a fellow student working on the output on 14L.......
The bond between hydrogen and fluorine is polar covalent and it can exhibit hydrogen bonding.
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.