The monomer for a lipid would be 3 fatty acids and a glycerol molecule.
The monomer for lipids is a fatty acid. Lipids are made up of fatty acids linked to glycerol to form molecules like triglycerides.
fatty acids
In terms of lipids, a monomer is a single building block unit, such as a fatty acid. A polymer is a larger molecule made up of repeating monomer units, like a triglyceride. A dimer is a molecule formed by the combination of two smaller molecules, as seen in some lipid modifications.
The monomers of proteins are known as amino acids....A further explanation:Do not confuse amino acids with nucleic acids. Nucleic acids are DNA and RNA and are another one of the BIG 4 macromolecules that are needed to survive.The 4 are:Carbohydrates (monomer: monosaccaride)Proteins (monomer: amino acids)Lipids (monomer: fatty acids)Nucleic Acids (monomer: nucleotides)
A polymer. Polymers are formed from the repetition of monomer units through chemical bonding to create long chains or networks.
monomer
monomer (monosaccharide)
Lipids do not have monomers and they themselves are the polymer
glycerol
Glycerol is a monomer of a lipid.
The monomers of lipids are fatty acids. These molecules consist of a hydrophilic head and a hydrophobic tail, making them essential components of cell membranes as well as energy storage molecules.
Covalents .
Glycerol and 3 fatty acids.
monomers for carbohydrates is monosaccharides simple sugar. monomer for lipids is 3 fatty acids
lipids
Lipids.
they are weird because you cannot recognize a single monomer.
fatty acids and glycerols
They are the lipids. They have glycerols and fatty acids