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It depends on the rule you use to classify it. Magnesium Sulfide is ionic, if using the metal-nonmetal rule. It is polar covalent, if using the 1.7 electronegativity difference rule. Both these rules are generalizations.

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12y ago
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14y ago

Magnesium is a metal, and sulphur is a non-metal, so the resulting compound has to be ionic, given by the chemical formula Mg3S.

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12y ago

Magnesium sulfate has ionic bonds between magnesium cations and sulfate anions and has covalent bonds within the polyatomic sulfate ions.

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12y ago

Ionic

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15y ago

IONIC!

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11y ago

ionic

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Q: Is magnesium sulfide a ionic or covalent compound?
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