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Last Answered 1215/24 [TRUE or FALSE7]: COVALENT -bonded molecules are only ever made up of 2 ATOMS , no more. [TRUE]: Covalent molecules become too UNSTABLE with more than 2 atoms [FALSE]: Covalent molecules always have MORE THAN 2 atoms in them [FALSE]: Each covalent BOND is made up of 2 ELECTRONS, but a covalent MOLECULE can have several bonds and thus several atoms [TRUE]: Atoms in covalent molecules can only form ONE bond

Question

Last Answered 1215/24
[TRUE or FALSE7]: COVALENT -bonded molecules are only ever
made up of 2 ATOMS , no more.
[TRUE]: Covalent molecules become too
UNSTABLE with more than 2 atoms
[FALSE]: Covalent molecules always have
MORE THAN 2 atoms in them
[FALSE]: Each covalent BOND is made up
of 2 ELECTRONS, but a covalent
MOLECULE can have several bonds and
thus several atoms
[TRUE]: Atoms in covalent molecules can
only form ONE bond

Last Answered 1215/24 [TRUE or FALSE7]: COVALENT -bonded molecules are only ever made up of 2 ATOMS , no more. [TRUE]: Covalent molecules become too UNSTABLE with more than 2 atoms [FALSE]: Covalent molecules always have MORE THAN 2 atoms in them [FALSE]: Each covalent BOND is made up of 2 ELECTRONS, but a covalent MOLECULE can have several bonds and thus several atoms [TRUE]: Atoms in covalent molecules can only form ONE bond

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DanielElite · Tutor for 8 years

Answer

FALSE: Each covalent BOND is made up of 2 ELECTRONS, but a covalent MOLECULE can have several bonds and thus several atoms**<br /><br />**

Explain

Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electron pairs between atoms. A molecule can have multiple covalent bonds, allowing it to consist of several atoms. Examples include water (H₂O), methane (CH₄), and carbon dioxide (CO₂), which all have more than two atoms.**
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