No. Sucrose is a disaccharide and is formed from two monosaccharides bonded by a glycosidic linkage. The two monomers or monosaccharides that form sucrose or table sugar are glucose and fructose.
Linguistically or literally: yes - it contains more than one of the unit -
However it is considered to be a disaccharide in common parlance.
(poly- = 'many' and di- = 'two')
No, sucrose is an example of a disaccharide which is made from alpha glucose and fructose in a condensation reaction. Galactose and Fructose are 2 examples of monosaccharides.
Yes. There are 3 different kinds of sugar: Monosaccharides, disaccharides and polysaccharides.
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glucose
Glucose
Glucose is monosaccharide. Sucrose is disaccharide. Cellulose and starch are polysaccharides.
to hydrolise sucrose solution into a monosaccharide ( glucose and fructose )
Sucrose is composed of one molecule of glucose linked to one molecule of fructose, and is therefore a disaccharide.ANSWER ITWhich of the following are not molecules? A.NaClB.MgCl2C.AgD.AlE.C3H8AG AND AL ARE NOT MOLECULESapex ;)
Yes. Maltose is a monosaccharide. Its chemical formula is C6H12O6, just like Glucose.
it is a monosaccharide
No. Glucose is a monosaccharide and sucrose is a disaccharide.
They are carbohydrates - fructose is a monosaccharide and lactose and sucrose are disaccharides.
They are carbohydrates - fructose is a monosaccharide and lactose and sucrose are disaccharides.
Two monosaccharide molecules are needed to form one sucrose molecule.
Sucrose is not a monosaccharide as galactose.
Glucose
Glucose is monosaccharide. Sucrose is disaccharide. Cellulose and starch are polysaccharides.
When combined covalently, the make sucrose.
Monosaccharide 6,4 %Disaccharide 4,1 %Sucrose 4,1 %
The most common monosaccharides of carbohydrates are fructose and glucose. (=sucrose)
The glucose monosaccharide would be absorbed more easily than the disaccharide.