A carbohydrate made of hundreds of molecules linked together is called a polysaccharide. An example of a polysaccharide is starch.
polysaccharide
The "hundreds of molecules" would be called hundreds of monomers. Collectively, many linked monomers makes up a polymer. So what you're asking is for the name of the polymer of a carbohydrate - polysaccharide.
This is called polymerization. If the "molecules" being chained together are amino acids, then Des Dichado is correct, and it is a polypeptide. If the molecules are sugars (monosaccharides), then it is a carbohydrate. If the molecules are fatty acids, then it is a lipid.
Cellulose belongs to polysaccharides, a group of carbohydrates.Cellulose belongs to a group of carbohydrate molecules called polysaccharides.
Carbohydrate molecules are made up of small sub-units called sugars. Carbohydrates also contain the elements hydrogen, oxygen and carbon.
A carbohydrate chain is one that is made of two to possibly hundreds of carbohydrate compounds that are called monosaccharides. When they are on membrane proteins they serve as recognition markers.
When water molecules are moving closer together in the air it is called
This phenomenon is called cohesion.
Sugar molecules are bonded together by a process called dehydration synthesis.
Molecules
The general term is "condensation reaction." "Dehydration reaction" is also appropriate.
a compression wave is the crowding of molecules a rarefaction is spread apart molecules
The bonding together of many similar but smaller molecules is called a synthesis reaction or a combination reaction.