No, lipids are actually macromolecules. Lipids or fats are made up of fatty acids and glycerol. They are functioning as insulators, forms cell membrane, hormones, and can provide energy.
Carbohydrate
of the choices: proteins starches nucleotides lipids nucleotides are not macromolecules
There are four macromolecules: carbohydrates, lipids, protiens, and nucleic acid.
The most common example is lipids.
lipids
i think lipids are the only class of macromolecules that are waxy, fatty, or oily. This answer is wrong.....and the question doesn't make sense. Lipids are not macromolecules.
Carbohydrate
Lipids iajwjwjjss
of the choices: proteins starches nucleotides lipids nucleotides are not macromolecules
There are four macromolecules: carbohydrates, lipids, protiens, and nucleic acid.
The four major macromolecules are proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids.
Lipids
they are their own class of macromolecules.
Lipids
The most common example is lipids.
lipids.
They are the lipids.Oil are saturated lipids