All saccharides, mono-, di-, poly-, or whatever, are organic compounds.
Yes. Monosaccharides are technically lipids, one of the four types of organic compounds.
Yes, but it's important to remember that this merely implies that they contain carbon, not that they are necessarily derived from living materials.
a carbohydrate
Yes. It is forme when two glucose molecules bond through dehydration synthesis. Since the monosaccharide glucose is organic, so is the disaccharide maltose.
No. A monosaccharide is a compound.
Do you mean how is an organic compound different from an inorganic compound? If so, an organic compound has carbon, an inorganic compound does not need to have carbon.
Yes it is organic compound
It has carbon and hydrogen.So it a organic compound
a carbohydrate
Yes. It is forme when two glucose molecules bond through dehydration synthesis. Since the monosaccharide glucose is organic, so is the disaccharide maltose.
No. A monosaccharide is a compound.
Glucose is an example of an organic compound that is classified as a monosaccharide. Other sugar molecules that are monosaccharaides are fructose and galactose.
Yes.
Yes. It's an organic compound with formula C 5 H 10 O 5-specifically, a pentose monosaccharide (simple sugar).
Do you mean how is an organic compound different from an inorganic compound? If so, an organic compound has carbon, an inorganic compound does not need to have carbon.
Yes, it is an organic compound.
Organic compound
Yes it is organic compound
No, it is not an organic compound.
The chemical makeup of glucose is C6H12O6.