a. sugars
ur welcome :) i have the same h.w. as you
complex carbohydrates are made of hundreds of sugar molecules. Carbohydrates are compounds made of sugar.
They are complex molecules made from smaller molecules.
Monomers are similar identical units covalently bonded to each other to from polymers. The monomer of carbohydrates are monosaccharides. Carbohydrates are polymers so its monomer is a simple sugar called monosaccharide.
Catabolism is the breakdown of larger, more complex molecules into smaller, simpler ones.Energy is released and some is trapped and made available for work.
You'd best be trollin'. But in all seriousness, sugars ARE carbs.
Amino Acids are the constituent elements of PROTEINS; a huge and diverse category of molecule.
Carbohydrates molecules are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. If it had only carbon and hydrogen (and no oxygen) it would be called a hydrocarbon.
Yes, it is correct.
Considering that complex carbohydrates or oligosaccharides are those that contain variable numbers of N-acetyllactosamine units, as well as sialic acid and/or fucose residues linked to the core, the best examples of these kinds of complex molecules, are those present in the red cell cytoplasmic membranes from where the "blood types" are distinguished.
Carbohydrates
All polysaccharides must contain glycosidic linkages because they are what bind monosaccharides to eachother. The easiest example I can think of is maltose. Two glucose molecules are binded together by glycosidic linkages that form the maltose molecule.
Starches are the most common complex carbohydrates that are found in human diets. Starches are polysaccharides that are made up of several glucose molecules tied together with glycosidic bonds.