it is a polysaccharide
polysaccharide
polysaccharide!
"Mono" means one "Poly" means many For any given sugar (saccharide), a polysaccharide would be larger.
Mono - Glucose, Fructose Di - Sucrose, Lactose Poly - Cellulose, Starch
Proteins, starch, poly(ethene), poly(propene) and PTFE are examples.
"Mono" means one and "poly" means many, and "mer" derives from a word that means parts, so a monomer is an atom or small molecule (one part) and a polymer is a large molecule with repeating structures (many parts).
The similarities are fairly easy - all three of these molecules are carbohydrates, that means that it is made up of carbons, hydrogens and oxygens. A more familiar description is that carbohydrates are long chains made up of sugar molecules. Another name for carbohydrate is polysaccharide (poly = many, saccharide = sugar). So, you might ask, why aren't starches sweet? Well, the chains are so long that the taste receptors on your tongue can not register them.
it is a polysaccharide
Sugars and starches.
I believe corn is a starch.Corn kernels contain sugar (sacharides) and starch (poly-saccharide). The stalk (stover) is lignin (poly-phenol) and cellulose (also a poly-saccharide).
"Mono" means one "Poly" means many For any given sugar (saccharide), a polysaccharide would be larger.
the monomer of poly saccharide is glucose
Mono - Glucose, Fructose Di - Sucrose, Lactose Poly - Cellulose, Starch
"mono" means "one," and "poly" means "many."
mono means "one" anp poly means "many."
last time my teacher just said their mono. Buddhism is the one that's poly.
it is reaction used to determine the position of linkage of the poly saccharide
Mono- means one, di- means two, and poly- means many or multiple. These prefixes are commonly used in chemistry to indicate the number of atoms of an element in a compound.
of course