Three. Trisaccharide means three sugars. Disaccharide is two, monosaccharide is one.
Two. It's in the name. The prefix di- means two. (e.g. diploid, diatomic, dimer....)
Three or more saccharides joined together are called a polysaccharide.
The prefix "di-" means "two" and "saccharide" refers to a sugar.
In disaccharide there two sugars
3(c6h12o6)= c18h36o18
carbohydrates-more specifically polysacharides
yes it is.but only after it is mixed with the amylase that comes from pancreatic juice.
A Disaccharide, or double sugar, is comprised of two monosaccharides (simple sugars) through a dehydration reaction. So a monomer for any disaccharide can be any basic isomerism of any monosaccharide such as: glucose, fructose, or galactose.
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen are the only elements that make up sugars.
They are sugars that the body can use directly, unlike complex sugars which the body has to first break down. Glucose is an example.
they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides
they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides they are polysaccharides
carbohydrates-more specifically polysacharides
No, a C3 sugar is a sugar containing 3 carbons. A trisaccharide is composed of 3 monosaccharide sugars.
A complex sugar.
Two sugars connected together are called disaccharides.
yes it is.but only after it is mixed with the amylase that comes from pancreatic juice.
No. Sugars are carbohydrates.
Mono = one Di = two That simple.
compound
polysaccharide
carbohydrates are sugar molecules linked together