Want this question answered?
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
Water has a polar molecule.
you do know what dihydrogen monoxide is, right? in case you don't, it is water, so is water a molecule or ionic compound?
Dihydrogen monoxide, water, is a molecule with covalent bonds.
Water = Dihydrogen Monoxide = H2O
H2O - i.e. it is water
H2O is the chemical formula of water (dihydrogen monoxide).
Dihydrogen monoxide is better known as water, or H2O. (The 2 is really a sub-script.)
Hydrogen oxide (you'll occasionally see "dihydrogen monoxide" but that's overkill).
dihydrogen monoxide http://butane.chem.uiuc.edu/cyerkes/Chem104A_BFA05/Genchemref/nomenclature_rules.html
Dihydrogen monoxide is water (H2O) !!
The symbol "H2O" represents a molecule of water. It consists of two hydrogen atoms (H) bonded to one oxygen atom (O), forming a single molecule of water. This molecular formula is a chemical shorthand used to denote the composition of water, where the subscript numbers indicate the number of atoms of each element present in the molecule.