that it could kill all the chickens
I think you could be talking about a Debate
A state could ignore the Nineteenth Amendment and pass a law forbidding women to
He hoped that they could work out their differences. "some line could be made out by which both of you could walk"
what could the congress do under the government body
The Pauling electronegativity of francium (metal) is 0,7 and the electronegativity of fluorine (nonmetal) is 3,98.
Generally so because the electronegativity of the nonmetal far exceeds the metal's electronegativity and thus the nonmetal will " pull " the electron(s) into it's valance shell.
Calcium is a metal with an electronegativity of 1.0 and oxygen is a nonmetal with an electronegativity of 3.5. The electronegativity difference is 2.5, and anything over 1.7 indicates an IONIC BOND.
nonmetal with high electronegativity.
Nitrogen triiodide? Sure is! Nonmetal to nonmetal, but I am too lazy tonight ( I have a cold ) to see what the electronegativity variance is, so polar or not I do not know. I will assume nonpolar.
Molecule. A nonmetal to nonmetal covalent bond. Electronegativity is not variant enough among the nonmetals to form ionic bonds.
This depends on the value of electronegativity.
Because it consists of a metal and a nonmetal with an electronegativity difference of 1.7.
It means their electronegativity is equal and they are likely to be diatomic in nature. O=O, An oxygen-oxygen bond for example. Otherwise it means the two atoms ( or more ) are so close in electronegativity that there is no polarity on the molecule. Usually nonmetal to nonmetal.
Generally the electronegativity is greater for nonmetals.
A polar covalent bond is a bond between two nonmetal atoms with different electronegativity's. Technically, only a bond between identical nonmetal atoms would be truly nonpolar, but in most cases a threshold is set for electronegativity difference to be considered polar.
One atom is a metal and one is a nonmetal One atom has a high electronegativity value, while the other value is relatively low.