Yes, you are correct. The bond found in a water molecule is a chemical bond. Specifically, it is a covalent bond. In a covalent bond, atoms share electrons in order to achieve a stable electron configuration. In the case of water, the oxygen atom shares electrons with two hydrogen atoms, forming two covalent bonds. This sharing of electrons creates a stable arrangement of the atoms and holds the water molecule together.
Water is a covalent bond but a special polarized one called a "hydrogen bond" that results in attraction between water molecules
I believe the answer is covalent bond. I think the question is about the bonging between the H atoms and the O atom of a water molecule. Although water forms hydrogen bonds, and many of them, those bonds are intermolecular and not intramolecular. I believe the question is all about a single molecule and intramolecular.