biochemistry

listen to the pronunciation of biochemistry
English - Turkish
(Biyokimya) yaşam kimyası
biyokimya

Biyokimya hakkında az bilgiye sahibim. - I have little knowledge of biochemistry.

hayati kimya
{i} biokimya
(Tıp) Hayati kimya, canlılardaki kimyasal olayları inceleyen bilim, biyo-kimya
(isim) biokimya
biochemistry department
biyokimya bölümü
biochemist
(Biyoloji) biokimyacı
biochemist
biyokimyacı
biochemist
biokimyaci
biochemist
(isim) biyokimyacı
insect biochemistry
(Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) böcek biyokimyası
English - English
The biochemical activity associated with a particular chemical or condition

The biochemistry of NO differs from that of NO2.

The chemistry of those compounds that occur in living organisms, and the processes that occur in their metabolism and catabolism

I want to study biochemistry.

The chemical characteristics of a particular living organism

The biochemistries of fungal and bacterial cells are quite distinct.

the study of chemistry of living systems
The chemistry of biology; the application of the tools and concepts of chemistry to living systems Biochemists study the structures and physical properties of biological molecules
the organic chemistry of compounds and processes occuring in organisms; the effort to understand biology within the context of chemistry
the study of the chemical processes and substances existing in living things
The chemistry of living organisms; the chemistry of the processes incidental to, and characteristic of, life
the study of the chemistry of living systems (23)
the study of the chemistry of living systems i e the interaction between molecules in living organisms
The chemistry of living things, including the structure and function of biological molecules and the mechanism and products of their reactions
{i} study of chemical processes in organisms
Biochemistry is the study of the chemical processes that happen in living things
is the study of the structure and function of organic molecules, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and specialized chemical compounds
A science that studies the chemistry of living organisms, including human beings
The biochemistry of a living thing is the chemical processes that happen in it or are involved in it. the scientific study of the chemistry of living things. Field of science concerned with chemical substances and processes that occur in plants, animals, and microorganisms. It involves the quantitative determination and structural analysis of the organic compounds that make up cells (proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids) and of those that play key roles in chemical reactions vital to life (e.g., nucleic acids, vitamins, and hormones). Biochemists study cells' many complex and interrelated chemical changes. Examples include the chemical reactions by which proteins and all their precursors are synthesized, food is converted to energy (see metabolism), hereditary characteristics are transmitted (see heredity), energy is stored and released, and all biological chemical reactions are catalyzed (see catalysis, enzyme). Biochemistry straddles the biological and physical sciences and uses many techniques common in medicine and physiology as well as those of organic, analytical, and physical chemistry
The chemistry of living organisms and life processes
The chemistry of living organisms and their vital processes
Chemistry dealing with the chemical processes and compounds of living organisms
biochemist
A chemist whose speciality is biochemistry
clinical biochemistry
An alternative name for clinical chemistry
soil biochemistry
The sub-discipline of soil science that studies chemical reactions, activities and products of soil microorganisms
biochemist
{i} one who specializes in biochemistry (study of chemical processes in organisms)
biochemist
someone with special training in biochemistry
biochemist
A biochemist is a scientist or student who studies biochemistry. someone who studies or works in biochemistry
biochemistry

    Hyphenation

    bi·o·chem·is·try

    Turkish pronunciation

    bayōkemıstri

    Pronunciation

    /ˌbīōˈkeməstrē/ /ˌbaɪoʊˈkɛməstriː/

    Etymology

    () From bio- +‎ chemistry
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