Ionic bonding.
It forms a covalent bond.
It forms a linear bond. The bond angle is 180 degrees
Fluorine seems a likely answer
Hydrogen bonding is a type of intermolecular force of attractionAdded:This is between molecules.It is not as strong as chemical bonding within molecules (intramolecular) though.
fluorine and silicon form a perdominately ionic bond. fluorine is a nonmetal and silicon is a metal.
Metallic.
Ionic or Covalent
No, table salt forms from sodium and chlorine via ionicbonding.Hydrogen bonding is technically not a form of bonding but a type of intermolecular force in compounds where hydrogen is bonded to nitrogen, oxygen, or fluorine.
dative covalent bond
Fluorine most often forms ionic bonds with other elements.
Fluorine atoms have a covalent bond between each other to form a covalent molecule. Fluorine bonded to a metal will have ionic bonds. Fluorine bonded to a non-meatl will have polar covalent bonding.
ionic bonds
Covalent bonding is the type of bonding not sure about the attraction though.
It forms a covalent bond.
The covalent bond is the strongest.
Ionic bonding is present in aluminium oxide.
Magnesium is an s-block element and it forms only ionic bonds with other elements.