No. Carbohydrates do contain hydrogen and oxygen, but not in the form of individual water molecules.
No.
Water itself is not a carbohydrate but some brands of bottled sports drink have added carbohydrates.
no. Carbohydrates contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
Sports beverages should contain water, carbohydrates, potassium, and sodium.
lipids contain energy just like carbohydrates,but lipids contain more energy Source: North Shore Community College Student Carbohydrates do contain energy but only for short periods of time, where as Lipids can contain energy for long periods of time even if this means that they are under-water.
No. Carbohydrates are carbon with water (most of the time). The ratio is 1 carbon to 1 hydrogen and 2 oxygens. The name does tell you: carbo- (carbon) + hydrate (water). So the generic formula is CHO2.I think you have it backwards. The general formula for a carbohydrate is CH2O, not CHO2.
Lemonade is not a carbohydrate. But lemonade do contain carbohydrates.
No, hormones are not carbohydrates.
Yes, fruit juices contain carbohydrates. Some contain more carbohydrates than other do just as some fruits contain more carbohydrates than others do.
There are no inorganic carbohydrates!.
Water contains hydrogen and oxygen. Sugar contains carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
Carbohydrates (saccharides) contain hydrogen, oxygen and carbon; the general formula is Cm(H2O)n.
it contains proteins,vitamins,fats,minerals,carbohydrates also with a large amount of H2O or water