A bond is considered stale when it has not been redeemed or cashed by the bondholder for an extended period, typically several years past its maturity date. Stale bonds may no longer accrue interest and can become harder to redeem due to lost or outdated records. Bondholders should contact the issuing institution or consult with a financial professional to address stale bond issues.
A stale bond check is a check that has not been cashed by the recipient for an extended period, typically six months or more. If a check remains uncashed beyond the stale date, the issuer may choose to cancel the check and reissue a new one.
No, a covalent bond is considered nonpolar when the two atoms share the electrons equally. If the electrons are not shared equally and there is an unequal distribution of charge, then the bond is considered polar.
The largest possible electronegativity difference for a bond to be considered covalent is around 1.7. When the electronegativity difference between two atoms in a bond exceeds this value, the bond is usually considered ionic rather than covalent.
ionic
A covalent bond where atoms share electrons equally is considered nonpolar. This occurs when the electronegativities of the atoms are similar and they attract the shared electrons equally, resulting in a balanced distribution of charge.
A stale bond check is a check that has not been cashed by the recipient for an extended period, typically six months or more. If a check remains uncashed beyond the stale date, the issuer may choose to cancel the check and reissue a new one.
Checks usually have a validity of 90 or 180 days (depending on the country) and after that date, the check is stale and worthless. No bank will accept such checks for cashing or cash it. Since it has no value it is considered to be stale.
Helium is considered a stale gas because there isn't a new source of it being added at any given time. An example of a non-stale gas would be oxygen, which is constantly renewed.
The only reason why a cheque may become stale is: The cheque was issued to you in the past and you have not yet deposited it for cashing it. Any cheque that is older than 180 days is considered stale. If you deposit a stale cheque - the bank will not release the funds
Yes, a triple bond is considered a multiple covalent bond.
Checks usually have a validity of 90 or 180 days (depending on the country) and after that date, the check is stale and worthless. No bank will accept such checks for cashing or cash it. Since it has no value it is considered to be stale. No bank will actually cash a stale check.
The homophone for "stale" is "stale," as in when two or more words sound the same but have different meanings.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
I do not have a stale mouth. Who said that i have a stale mouth? :D :D
No, a covalent bond is considered nonpolar when the two atoms share the electrons equally. If the electrons are not shared equally and there is an unequal distribution of charge, then the bond is considered polar.
A check that is older than 90 days (or 180 days depending on the Country) is considered a stale or expired check. It is worthless and carries no value. You cannot cash such a check. Since the check is expired, the check issuing bank will not pay for it. Such a check is called a stale dated check
A stale cheque is a term used to refer to a cheque that is old and expired. Such cheques are totally worthless. Cheques usually have a validity period after which they are considered expired or stale. In india the validity is 3 months and in most countries around the globe it is between 3 to 6 months. If I give you a cheque on 1st of May 2013 the cheque will be valid till 31st July 2013 and starting 1st August 2013, the cheque will be considered stale. If you try to cash that cheque, you will not get any money.