Carbon dioxide, Hydrocarbons, and carbon copies
Organic compounds.
Originally the definition of organic compounds was those chemical compounds that could only be made by living things. However as chemists learned ways to make these compounds the definition was changed to complex carbon compounds.
- Carbohydrates- Proteins- Lipids- Nucleic acids
because it was once believed that such compounds could not be synthesized in a lab but could only be produced in living things/organisms because of some "supernatural essence" unique to themorganic compounds are very complex carbon compounds
Organic compounds always contain Carbon and Hydrogen. Most organic compounds contain elements like Oxygen,Nitrogen,Phosphorus and sulphur. Organic compounds are found in living things.
Living things are based on compounds of carbon.
Organic compounds made by living things are called carbon compounds. This is because carbon is required by all living things to function.
these are carbon compounds not found in living things
Carbon containing compounds found in living things are called organic compounds. Examples of organic compounds are carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleotides.
Organic compounds.
It is called organic compounds (made from living organisms, or used to be). It was only in the nineteenth century when organic compounds could be made in the laboratory from inorganic substances (gas, rocks, minerals, etc.)
"organic"
Many "organic" compounds are created by living tissue, and living things (on Earth, at any rate) always are based on carbon.
Four groups of organic compounds found in living things are:CarbohydratesLipidsNucleic acidsProteins
Almost all living things around is is made of carbon and its compounds (organic compounds) including plant, animals and living organisms. So, to simply put forward, without carbon compounds life would be impossible around us.
Carbon is necessary for all living things.
Carbon-containing compounds are generally referred to as organic compounds (from the previously-held, erroneous belief that they could only be formed by living things). However, not all compounds that contain carbon are considered organic. For example, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide are considered inorganic, despite the fact that they contain carbon.