When you and someone you know have been through the same thing, can understand each other and feel a sense of security that you can relate and understand.
Yep me and her have a trauma bond.
32๐ 9๐
The only British person who actually sounds cool when he speaks.
You can't get much smoother than "The name's Bond. James Bond."
108๐ 56๐
a group of men/women all scared or in fear of the same thing/situation about to happen.
bob- "this cliff looks a bit sketchy to jump off of.."
fred- "yea man, total fear bond."
13๐ 4๐
To masturbate somewhere besides your house
I was so horny at Jim's house, I had to pull a James Bond
When you're able to pull of something so awesome, your only option is to scream out the main part of the 007 theme upon completion.
(while driving)
Bob: Jim, watch out for that semi!!
(Jim grazes the guardrail at the perfect angle to make his 98' F-150 do three front flips over the semi, which then drives directly into a wall and bursts into flames.)
Jim: DUH-NUH, NAH-NAH, NUH-NUH-NAH
Bob: That was a fucking Bond Moment, man!
The feeling that the people you roll with (ecstasy, ex, MDMA) are your closest friends; bonded through ex
After rolling, Sally and I have the craziest ex bond. I feel like she's one of my closest friends now.
There are three general types of bonding. Covalent, Polar-Covalent, and Ionic bonding.
Covalent bonding is when an atom shares its electron in the process to become stable. For example, a hydrogen would bond with another hydrogen, as it fills it's first orbital, and therefore becoming a stable element.
Polar-Covalent bonding is like covalent bonding, but it involves two (or more) different elements. To understand how this works, you'll need to understand valence electron orbitals.
Short version: If its in group 1A, it has 1 valence electron, 2A, two valence electrons, etc. Once it has eight valence electrons, it becomes stable. Transition metals (Group B elements), Hydrogen, and helium are an exception to this.
Take water as an example (H2O). Oxygen is in group 6A, and so it has six valence electrons, needing two more to complete its valence octet. Hydrogen has 1 valence electron (1A), so two Hydrogens share their electrons with Oxygen.
Why is it polar? Oxygen is more "Electronegative", or how much it wants the electrons. Oxygen is more electronegative, so the electrons want to be with oxygen more than Hydrogen. Oxygen's lone electron pairs that act as bonded electrons, pushing away the hydrogens, making the asymmetrical shape.
Ionic bonding is where an atom "donates" an electron to another atom. For example, Sodium Chloride (table salt). Sodium is in 1A, while Chloride is in 7A. Needless to say, one electron goes from Sodium to Chlorine, and they both become stable.
Covalent has two elements working together, as if it was a co-op mode.
Friend A: ugHHH I have so much chemistry homework to do!!
Friend B: Isn't it that chemical bonding crap?