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The molecule releases a water molecule.
Yes, a macro-molecule is huge comparatively.
polymer. A polymer is a large organic molecule composed of repeating subunits called monomers. The monomers are connected through covalent bonds, forming a long chain-like structure. Examples of polymers include DNA, proteins, and synthetic materials like plastics and rubber.
A nucleotide is a single structural unit of DNA. If two or more nucleotides are combined together by a polymerase enzyme, the resulting molecule is a polymer. RNA is also composed of nucleotides and can be formed into polymers.
Carbohydrate
Polymer
It's called a polymer ( the single unit is a monomer) a repetitive bonding of a series of smaller molecules, a good example being a complex sugar molecule, a carbohydrate, compose of a string of smaller simple sugars (monosaccharides) to make it a polysaccharide.
Strictly chemistry speaking: a polymer is a repeated chain of a single molecule. They can be easily synthesized in a lab to create materials with specific properties (i.e. contact lenses, plastics, water repellant)
A polymer molecule is a macromolecule.
polymer is compound which has repeated units and a compound may not have repeated units
This is a comlex carbohydrate made from many different sugar molecules joined together
The molecule releases a water molecule.
YES. it's a polymer made up of repeated units of fatty acids.
A molecule made of many repeating parts is known as a polymer.
Yes, a macro-molecule is huge comparatively.
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I assume you meant polymer. Well the definition of polymer is.... Any of numerous natural and synthetic compounds of usually high molecular weight consisting of up to millions of repeated linked units, each a relatively light and simple molecule. And yes i got this from answers.com -_-