No, because with a covalent bond is different from an H-bond, since there is no actual exchange of electrons occurring with the H-bond, it's more along the lines of london dispersion forces and dipole-dipole bonding. It just irritates me to no end that I can't find a technical term for that, apart from H-bond.
Well, take water.
The hydrogen bonding that takes place in water is between one oxygen and two hydrogen. Each of these are from a different molecule of H
2O. These bonds occur because of water's structure. It looks something like this.
H-O-HThose dashes are covalent bonds. Oxygen is 2-, and it has to lose 2 electrons to have its outer shell of electrons be filled.
Hydrogen, on the other hand, is (1)+. This means it has to gain one electron to satisfy its outer shell of electrons.
This means one O bonds with two separate H's. Neither of them are actually metals, so they can't have an ionic bond. What they have is closer to a covalent bond. But you are right, it is a different kind of bond, but there is still an "exchange" of electrons. You cannot have a bond without an "exchange" of electrons.
Oh, but there's a reason you can't find a more technical name than Hydrogen Bond.
That is the technical name.
Something along the lines of a metallic bond? There's no real bonding there, it's just electrons and positive nuclei all living together like "yeah bro"
It's not a metallic bond. It is like a covalent bond, but it acts a bit differently.