"organic"
Carbon compounds associated with living things are called organic compounds. These molecules generally contain carbon-hydrogen bonds and are the building blocks of life, including carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids.
Organic compounds made by living things are called carbon compounds. This is because carbon is required by all living things to function.
They are called organic compounds. Every living thing contains carbon, so a carbon compound that comes from a lving thing is considered an organic compound.
Carbon containing compounds found in living things are called organic compounds. Examples of organic compounds are carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleotides.
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.)
Carbon compounds are classified as organic compounds because they primarily contain carbon atoms bonded with other elements such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus. These compounds are typically associated with living organisms and their processes, hence the term "organic." Inorganic compounds, on the other hand, are generally simpler compounds that do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds.
these are carbon compounds not found in living things
Organis compound. Carbohydrates, lipids, nucleotide, and proteins
You may be referring to organic compounds. All organic compounds contain carbon but all compounds that contain carbon are not necessarily organic. A more general term would be carbonaceous.
Living things are based on compounds of carbon.
Basically, all organic compounds have carbon and organic chemistry is the study of carbon based comounds. Inorganic generally do not contain carbon (with exceptions being carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates and metal carbides).
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.