Three examples of monosaccharide are glucose, fructose, and galactose. Three other types of monosaccharide are ribose, maltose, and xylose.
The four kinds of carbohydrates are monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are simple sugars, disaccharides consist of two monosaccharide units, oligosaccharides have a small number of monosaccharide units, and polysaccharides are complex carbohydrates with many monosaccharide units.
The monomer for carbohydrates is a simple sugar called monosaccharide. glucose, fructose, and galactose are common monosaccharides that can serve as monomers to form more complex carbohydrates.
Yes, galactose is a monomer, or more specifically a monosaccharide, due to the fact that it is a simple sugar. It is one of the three most common sugars present in biology, along with glucose and fructose, and is able to bond with other simple sugars to form chains, or carbohydrates.
A monosacharide is a "simple" sugar such as glucose or fructose. A polysaccharide is a polymer made by linking many monosacharides together. For example, glycogen is a polysaccharide; it is a polymer of glucose.
A chemical composed of one or more simple sugars is called a carbohydrate. Carbohydrates are essential molecules for energy storage and provide structural support in living organisms. Examples of carbohydrates include glucose, sucrose, and cellulose.
fructose
no
The four kinds of carbohydrates are monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are simple sugars, disaccharides consist of two monosaccharide units, oligosaccharides have a small number of monosaccharide units, and polysaccharides are complex carbohydrates with many monosaccharide units.
Yes it is true. They build up the carbohydrates
Monosaccharide is the monomer that makes all carbohydrates.
I think you mean to ask what the monomer of a carbohydrate is, but you've already answered that: monosaccharide.
Monosaccharide
No. By definition, a monosaccharide is the smallest unit of carbohydrate.Some monosaccharides can be converted to others in the body, but these are not in any real sense 'smaller' carbohydrates.
stupid pice crap
monosaccharide
monosaccharide
They are carbohydrates - fructose is a monosaccharide and lactose and sucrose are disaccharides.