Great explanation, Youssef!
I want to mention that the OVERALL polarity of the molecule CBr4 is 0.
However, each bond of C---Br is (slightly) polar.
What's the difference or distinction in these statements?
Stretch your two arms out beside you, and imagine that you have two friends (wow... friends... remember those? 😥) tugging on your arms. If they are both EQUALLY strong, you will feel an equal-and-opposite balanced force on your arms, and you won't move anywhere. This is what C-Br4 feels. It has FOUR ARMS, and feels an equal and opposite force in 4 different directions. It's not moving anywhere (i.e., it's not a polar molecule), but each of its individual arms FEELS a pulling force, so each individual ARM is (slightly) polar.
I say *slightly* polar because the electronegativity difference (a way that we can quantify polarity) between C and Br is small (about 0.3).