"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".
Covalent, Ionic, Dative (also know as coordinate).
weak hydrogen bonds hold together sugars and phosphates
yes
Molecular compounds are formed between two ionic bonds
Molecular substances have a lower melting and boiling point than Ionic. Also, molecular substances can be two non metals joined together where as Ionic it is a metal and nonmetal. Molecular substances have covalent bonds and Ionic have Ionic bonds.
molecules glued together with super gluee. this kind of bond can only be formed between a metal and a non metal
covalent bonds
nonmetals because they are associated with molecular compounds.
Ionic bonds are strong, molecular bonds are relatively weak.
heat energy that helps break the molecular bonds of a solid is heat of The answer is fusion
nonmetal
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.
they tend to have strond bonds
Water is composed of molecular bonds, but forms hydrogen bonds with other water molecules. Hydrogen bonds are not actual bonds, but they cause an attraction between the water molecules, which is why water is adhesive.
The bonds are called covalent molecular bonds.
Intra molecular bonds are covalent.Inter molecular bonds are Hydrogen.
Ionic bonds are stronger.
no. It has covalent bonds only