Links are basically of two types:
Symbolic links (soft): link to a symbolic path indicating the abstract location of another file
Hard links: link to the specific location of physical data.
Example 1:
ln /root/file1 /root/file2
The above is an example of a hard link where you can have a copy of your physical data.
Example 2:
ln -s /path/to/file1.txt /path/to/file2.txt
The above command will create a symbolic link to file1.txt.
If you delete a source file then you won't have anything to the destination in soft.
When you do:
ls -lai
You'll see that there is a different inode number for the symlinks.
For more details, you can read the man page of ln on your Linux OS.