cellulose
If by 2 polysaccharides you mean any two, then some of the common examples would be cellulose, peptidoglycan, starch (amylose and amylopectin), hemicellulose, chitin, glycogen ........... the list is almost endless.
When Iodine is added to amylose, the helical shape of the unbranched polysaccharide traps Iodine molecules, producing a deep blue-black complex. Amylopectin, cellulose, and Glycogen react with iodine to give red to brown colors. Glycogen produces a reddish-purple color.
amylose and amylopectin
Glycogen, Cellulose, and Starch are all examples of Polysaccharides.
glycogen
cellulose
STARCH in plants. GLYCOGEN in animals.
cellulose is found in cell wall of plant cell while glycogen is reserve food material in fungi
They're called polysaccharides and they exhibit a great diversity of form and composition. Examples include amylopectin and amylose found as starch in plants and glycogen found in animals all used for secondary energy storage. Together with cellulose, which is also a polysaccharide, these are the most common polysaccharides but there are many others.
starch cellulose glycogen
monosacchsride, glycogen and cellulose