No. Carbon and nitrogen are both elements. They contain only themselves.
Nitrogen. Carbohydrates and fats contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but proteins contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
All proteins contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. Most of them also contain sulfur, which is found in the standard amino acid residues cysteine and methionine (any given protein might not contain either of these, though it would be unusual).
nitrogen, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen
No. By definition, carbohydrates contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
ammonia have nitrogen atoms. but it doesn't contain C.
No. Sugars are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but not nitrogen.
Organic compounds contain carbon atoms. Nitric acid (HNO3) contains no such carbon atoms, so it is inorganic.
all organic molecules contain carbon atomsCarbon, hydrogen and oxygen
lipids do not contain proteins
protein
nitrogen gasammonianitratesnitrogen tri-iodideexplosivesamino acidsproteinsetc.
No. Carbon and Nitrogen are different elements themselves. They don't contain any element within them.