I believe it's starch.
Because glucose is such an important molecule from which organisms obtain energy, plants and animals will string together units of glucose called polysaccharides. Plants store glucose as a polysaccharide called starch.
d-glucose is called dextrose, l-glucose is called levose
amino acids form a chain called a polypeptide chain and form a protein
a unit of sugar in carbihydrates is called monosaccharides. units of sugar (polymers) is called polysaccharides.
This sugar is called Glucose.
The simplest carbohydrate molecule is a sugar. For example, glucose. A single glucose (or any other simple sugar) is called a monosaccharide. A string of two joined sugar molecules (say 2 joined glucoses) forms a disaccharide. Many thousands of sugar molecules joined into a very long string is what a polysaccharide is. Starch is a plant-stored polysaccharide and glycogen is an animal-stored polysaccharide. These are examples of very long strings of alpha glucose molecules. A long string of beta glucoses forms the polysaccharide called cellulose.
Because glucose is such an important molecule from which organisms obtain energy, plants and animals will string together units of glucose called polysaccharides. Plants store glucose as a polysaccharide called starch.
When the long string of a piano produces pitch it is called treble.
It's called Glucose.
It is called an archipelago.
Starch :)
If you are referring to a string with no fingers on it, it is called an open string.
d-glucose is called dextrose, l-glucose is called levose
A word. It equals 2 bytes. A Long Word is 32 bits long.
Long layers of beta-glucose; or long strings of monomers of Glucose, acknowledging that there are two different ways to conjoin monomers of Glucose. Cellulose exists in plants, whereas the other form of glucose storage that occurs in animal Cells is called Glycogen.
Glucose+glucose=a disaccharide called "maltose" Glucose+lots more glucose=a polysaccharide called "starch"
Standard tuning is E-A-D-G-B-e. The names goes as follows. First pick up the guitar as if you were going to play it. The string closest to the ground is called the high E string, or the first string (it is the thinnest) The string above this one is called the B string or the second string The string above this one is called the Gstring or the third string The next one above is called the D string or the fourth string The next one above is called the A string or the fifth string The highest string is called the low E string or the sixth string. (it is the thickest)