A nucleic acid is a polymer. Its monomers are glycerol and fatty acids. Hope I helped :)
the chromosme has deoxy nucleic acid............so dumb don't know this.............
Carbohydrates,Proteins,Nucleic acid,Lipids
Sulfuric acid, Hydrochloric acid, Nitric acid, Phosphoric Acid
they put in small amounts of acid, such as citric acid, malic acid, and ascorbic acid.
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No. A nucleic acid is a subunit of a [the] polymer.
polymers are a type of carbohydrate, but DNA is a type of nucleic acid and polypeptides are proteins
RNA is a polymer that is made up of a sugar called ribose. Ribose is a simple sugar known as pentose monosaccharide.
Nucleic acids are polymers made from chains nucleotide monomers. The most well known of which are DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid).
DNA's sugar is deoxyribose, and RNA's sugar is ribose. (DNA = deoxyribose nucleic acid, RNA = ribonucleic acid)
DNA or RNA (and for smaller polymers; di and trinucleotide)
Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides.
Nucleic acid, which contains a pentose (either deoxyribose or ribose), phosphate group, and a nitrogen base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine/uracil). In addition, there is a covalent bond between the phosphate group and the pentose, and a hydrogen bond between the complementary bases.
no
Nucleic Acids are polymers of nucleotides with very specific functions in cells.
The composition of the nucleic acid-DNA includes polynucleotides which are composed of guanine, adenine, thymine, cytosine, a phosphate group, and deoxyribose (a monosaccharide sugar).
There are only two chief types of nucleic acids. They are the DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), which carries the hereditary information from generation to generation, and RNA (ribonucleic acid), which delivers the instructions coded in this information to the cell's protein manufacturing sites.