NaCl (table salt, an ionic compound)
CO2 (carbon dioxide, a covalently bonded compound)
Compounds are pure chemical substances with two or more different chemical element that can be separated by chemical reactions. Examples include water compounds (oxygen and hydrogen), and table salt (sodium and chlorine).
The combinations of two or more elements are called compounds. Sodium chloride and magnesium sulfate are both examples of compounds formed by combining multiple elements together through chemical bonds.
Water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), table salt (NaCl), and methane (CH4) are examples of compounds that contain two elements.
Water (H2O) and methane (CH4) are two examples of covalent compounds. Covalent compounds are formed when nonmetals bond together by sharing electrons.
Simple compounds are composed of only two elements. They have a fixed ratio of atoms, and their chemical formula can be represented by two elements or two elements and a subscript number. Examples include water (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2).
Common domestic examples are table salt NaCl and sugar C12H22O11.
Copulative compound is for example "bittersweet" or "sleepwalk". These are compounds which have two semantic heads, you can recognize them by possibility of adding "and" between the two heads (bitter and sweet...).
Compounds are pure chemical substances with two or more different chemical element that can be separated by chemical reactions. Examples include water compounds (oxygen and hydrogen), and table salt (sodium and chlorine).
All are compounds; a form of matter composed of two or more elements.
The combinations of two or more elements are called compounds. Sodium chloride and magnesium sulfate are both examples of compounds formed by combining multiple elements together through chemical bonds.
Water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), table salt (NaCl), and methane (CH4) are examples of compounds that contain two elements.
Examples: stearic acid, hydrofluoric acid.
Examples: maltose and trehalose.
Compounds are composed of two or more elements chemically combined. Examples include H2O, CO2, NaCl, KOH, H2SO4, which in order are water, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, potassium hydroxide, and sulfuric acid.
Some examples of compounds are water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), sodium chloride (NaCl), and glucose (C6H12O6). These compounds are formed when two or more different elements chemically bond together.
Water (H2O) and methane (CH4) are two examples of covalent compounds. Covalent compounds are formed when nonmetals bond together by sharing electrons.
Some examples of compounds are :Water - H2OTable salt - NaClCarbon dioxide - CO2Potassium hydroxide - KOHHydrogen cyanide - HCNMethane - CH4Ethyl Alcohol - C2H5OHSulphuric Acid - H2SO4