The word hydrate in the chemical name of a compound normally means that
the compound has water molecules in the compound molecular structure. That
is not the case in Carbohydrates.
A Carbohydrate is an organic compound with the empirical formula CxH2nOn.
The ratio of H to O is that of water, but that does not mean there are actually
water molecules in them.
Carbohydrates are polyhydroxy aldehydes, polyhydroxy ketones or compounds
that can be hydrolyzed to them.
Examples of carbohydrates are: glucose, sucrose, lactose, starch, cellulose.
C6H12O6 ia the equation for carbohydrates
Not a meteorologist, but I'd think that the word "isolated" would still have its ordinary meaning- - by it self, or disconnected from another of its kind. As in isolated showers.
This is Lithium Chlorate! be very careful with this substance! dont get it on ANY part of your body!
There is no such word. Perhaps you mean scrotum.
the word useless mean that someone or something is lazy or that it dosent work as you want
Yes, the word "carbohydrate" has its roots in "carbo-" meaning carbon and "hydrate" referring to water. Carbohydrates are compounds consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms, with the general formula (CH2O)n.
hydrate
Bread is a carbohydrate, so look at the word. The carbo in carbohydrate means carbon, and the hydrate means hydrogen and oxygen. So yes bread does contain carbon.
The term "carbohydrate" comes from the chemical composition of these compounds, which consist of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen molecules. The "carbo-" prefix refers to carbon, while the "-hydrate" suffix suggests the presence of water molecules in the structure.
What does the word TERMS means for a voucher examiner
carbohydrate is good and bad.
carbohydrate is good and bad.
it mean triple
hydro
No, "hydrate" does not contain the affix "hy-". In this case, "hydrate" is a standalone word consisting of the root "hydr-" which means water, and the suffix "-ate" indicating a salt or compound.
Hydrate, satiate quench
Heart