The Ca and OH bond is an ionic one (i.e. the Ca2+ 2(OH-)) and the O-H bond is a Polar Covalent bond
The bonds between calcium and hydroxide in calcium hydroxide are ionic, and the bonds between oxygen and hydrogen are covalent.
Calcium hydroxide is an ionic compound.
Ionic
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
The acetate groups are comprised of covalent bonds, but they are ionically bonded with the calcium.
The bonds between calcium and hydroxide in calcium hydroxide are ionic, and the bonds between oxygen and hydrogen are covalent.
Bonds aren't strictly covalent or ionic - it's a whole grey area. CaOH2 probably has bonds with both covalent and ionic properties.
Calcium hydroxide is an ionic compound.
The Oxygen and the Hydrogen atoms are held together by Covalent bonds and the Calcium is held together with Ionic bonds.
The hydroxide anions in calcium hydroxide have covalent bonding between oxygen and hydrogen atoms, and these anions are ionically bonded to calcium cations to form the complete compound.
Ionic
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
The acetate groups are comprised of covalent bonds, but they are ionically bonded with the calcium.
Calcium cyanide contains both ionic and covalent bonds: There are calcium cations and cyanide anions, and the cyanide anions contain internal covalent bonds, specifically triple bonds between carbon and nitrogen.
Calcium and fluorine will form an ionic bond.
Sodium hydroxide has ionic bonds. A compound never is any kind of bond.
Neither. No element will form ionic bonds with itself. Since calcium is a metal, its atoms are joined together by metallic bonds.