Polycarbonate or cellulose contain oxygen.
Actually, macromolecules contain Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen
No, an oxygen atom is O but oxygen exists as a molecule O2. A macromolecule is a large one. An example of a macromolecule would be DNA or a protein or a polymer. Oxygen does not fit this category.
Of course not.It is made up of two oxygen molecules like O=O
The major macromolecules are lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates. Hemoglobin is mostly protein.
Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
Actually, macromolecules contain Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen
No, an oxygen atom is O but oxygen exists as a molecule O2. A macromolecule is a large one. An example of a macromolecule would be DNA or a protein or a polymer. Oxygen does not fit this category.
Polysaccharides.
Sucrose contain only two small units.
Of course not.It is made up of two oxygen molecules like O=O
Oxygen contain oxygen atoms and silicon contain silicon atoms.
The major macromolecules are lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates. Hemoglobin is mostly protein.
Not necessarily. it depends what is the exact macromolecule under consideration.
Not necessarily. Amines contain nitrogen, but many do not contain oxygen.
Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
No, some do not contain oxygen at all
A large molecule that contain carbon-hydrogen bonds and are found in living things