So I've recently just began studying Organic Chemistry, and one of the first things that I'm completely confused on is the concept of electrophiles and nucelophiles.
Take for example CH3Cl. My textbook says that it's an electrophile, but can't you make the argument that because chlorine has 3 lone pairs of electrons (and because it'll be negatively polarized), it's actually a nucleophile?
But then for the compound CH3CH=O, the textbook said that it was both an electrophile and a nucleophile. Following the logic of the first example, since the electronegative chlorine was ignored, shouldn't the electronegative oxygen also be ignored, and the compound be only a electrophile? Why is in this case, the electronegative oxygen also makes it an nucelophile, but the electronegative chlorine didn't make chloromethane an nucleophile?
Finally, HBr is said to be an electrophile, because of the positive charge of hydrogen. But isn't there also a negative charge on bromine, so shouldn't it be both an electrophile, and a nucleophile?
I guess my confusion really lies in that shouldn't a compound always be both an electrophile, and a nucelophile, since if a polarized positive regions exists, there must also be a polarized negative region?