Roughly I'd expect the the C=O band between 1600-1700 and the N-H around 3500-3700. Anyway it should be possible to Google that in less than 2 min.
Yes, paracetamol is the medical name for N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide, so it does contain an amide group.
An amidoamine is any amine which also has an amide group, typically a monoamide of a diamine.
An amic acid is any organic compound which has both a carboxylic acid and an amide functional group.
When an amine is combined (reacted) with a carboxyl group, an AMIDE + water is formed, and if you carry on heating under a vacuum, an imidazoline is formed.
Acetylsalicylic acid, aromatic group, and the carboxylic acid
An amide is a derivative of an oxoacid in which the hydroxyl group has been place with an amino or substituted amino group - especially such derivatives of a carboxylic acid.
Amide group
Yes, paracetamol is the medical name for N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide, so it does contain an amide group.
At around 1700-1800 [1/cm]
oH group
Amide.
Amide, ester, hydroxyl group
In chemistry, an amide is usually an organic compound that contains the functional group consisting of an acyl group (R-C=O) linked to a nitrogen atom (N). The term refers both to a class of compounds and a functional group within those compounds. The term amide also refers to deprotonated form of ammonia (NH3) or an amine, often represented as anions R2N-. The remainder of this article is about the carbonyl-nitrogen sense of amide. For discussion of these "anionic amides," see the articles sodium amide and LDA.
A special amide bond that forms between the amine group and the hydroxyl group on amino acids.
It is more an alkaline compound (by the amide group) than an acidic (by the phenolic -OH group).
Benzoylation is a type of substitution reaction in which the hydrogen of amide group or hydroxy group of aromatic benzene group take place.
An amide bond forming a chain of peptides. Peptide bond is only a special amide bond name for this particular bonding.