Gases don't form inter-molecular bonds, as the molecules are free floating. Solids would have the strongest, being held rigidly in a single shape, unlike liquids.
triangle is the strongest polygon
It depends on what you mean by "strongest".Strongest by military? Diplomacy? Trade? Economy?The strongest military country is China.The strongest diplomatic country is the United Kingdom.The strongest trade country is a tie between the United Kingdom and Canada.The strongest economical country is the United States.The strongest sporting country is Australia.The strongest illegal exports country is Afghanistan.The strongest eco-friendly country is a tie between Norway, United Kingdom and Germany.The strongest precious stones producing country is Columbia.The strongest educational country is South Korea.The strongest scientific country is Finland.The strongest freedom and equality country is a tie between Iceland and Norway.The strongest peaceful country is Iceland.The strongest agricultural country is India.The strongest recycling country is Israel.The strongest technologically advanced country is Japan.The strongest corrupt country is North Korea.The strongest country by income and finance is Monaco.The strongest country by gas production/ownership is Russia.The strongest country by oil production/ownership is Russia.The strongest country by diamond production/ownership is Russia.The strongest country by size is Russia.The strongest country by air-force is a tie between United States, United Kingdom and Russia.The strongest country by navy is a tie between the United Kingdom and China.The strongest country by land army is China.The strongest country by motor army is China.The strongest country by warheads (missiles) is a draw between China, Russia, United Kingdom, United States, North Korea and France.
xanax....but clonazepam is strongest in canada
the strongest figure is Joe Zombie
Not really. Firstly, there are sextuple bonds. Secondly, quintuple bonds readily break to form far more stable triply/doubly bonded compounds, so it really depends on what you mean by strength. Also, while quintuple bonds are almost always between homonuclear species, which means they are strong since the energy match between orbitals is favourable, they can only occur amongst the highest energy shells, namely the 4d and 5d shells. Effectively these bonds are weaker than, say, a carbon-oxygen triple bond (see carbon monoxide) because the bonding orbitals of a 2sp2-2sp2 interaction are much lower in energy than the d-orbital interactions in the delta/pi/sigma bonds of a quintuple bonds. I can't seem to find any quintuple-bond bond enthalpy data, but the strongest bond that I know of is the C≡O bond with enthalpy value 1077kJ/mol. I highly doubt that the quintuple bond is of higher enthalpy.a
Hydrogen bonds can be considered as the strongest intermolecular attraction forces.
Out of these metals, lithium has the strongest bonds. Aluminum has the weakest bonds and magnesium has somewhat strong bonds.
I don't know if these are the bonds listed in your question, but here is an orderCovalent - ionic - hydrogen(covalent bonds are the strongest, and hydrogen bonds are the weakest bonds)
ionic
Covalent bonds are the second strongest
Ionic bonds
Ionic bonds are the strongest bonds
The strongest IMF Hydrazine has is Hydrogen bonds.
The covalent bond is the strongest.
Whichever metal can contribute the most valence electrons will form the strongest metallic bonds.
The answer is no. If you are comparing them with covalent or metallic bonds, then covalent is the strongest in general. There are, obviously, exceptions, but in general ionic bonds are easier to break than covalent bonds.