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No. Cellulose and starch are both forms of carbohydrates, not a form of one another.
Both. Cytoplasm is a common feature of all cells.
they are both plants
Simple sugars are not macromolecules, but starches and cellulose are both polysaccharides and macromolecules.
Simple sugars are not macromolecules, but starches and cellulose are both polysaccharides and macromolecules.
Both are glucose polymers.
They are both polysaccharides composed of glucose monomers.
They were both dominated by men.
Starch and cellulose are two common carbohydrates. Both are macromolecules with molecular weights in the hundreds of thousands. Both are polymers (hence "polysaccharides"); that is, each is built from repeating units, monomers, much as a chain is built from its links. The monomers of both starch and cellulose are the same: units of the sugar glucose. Starch contains alpha-glucose as monomer, whereas cellulose contains beta-glucose.
They are both played with bows.
both carbohydrate and sucrose
both are formed of glucose
they are both rocks and are heavy sometimes
They are both gaseous, they both have spots, and they both have fierce surface "winds".
they both slept with your mom
Cellulose is not a plant. It is a carbohydrate, a polymer of sugar that makes up the cell wall of all plants.
They are both music and i think they both come from black people