Type your answer here... Covalently bonded molecules
I'm pretty sure it's riged. Mainly because if something is rigid, it's kind of bumpy, which means it's kind of riged.
You could call someone named Pierre "P" as a nickname.
Well, I will give three examples, the bolded letters are the prefixes:impossible/ not possible.astronomy/ the study of stars and planets.antibacterial/ against bacteriaNow here are examples on when I would use these words/prefixes:or me, it is impossible to get to school on time and not being tardy.I'm not a big fan of math, but asrtonomy is my kind of thing.When I bought my germ-x at wal-mart, it said on the front that it was antibacterial.
It is an action verb. One example: ancient astronomers named planets after their gods.
It was weird, but it kind of felt like I was back in the future in my dream.
Type your answer here... Covalently bonded molecules
Prefixes are used to tell how many of each kind of atom are in covalent compounds. - APEX
duo... or du... are both prefixes meaning two of the same kind.
They are chemical compounds
positive
Sodium
They have nothing
For example, ionic compounds: inorganic acids, salts, bases; many organic compounds, etc.
No, the other way around. Kind of. Elements are made of compounds of atoms.
The entire range of chemical compounds available in the universe
ionic compounds
inorganic compounds