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fructose

fruc·tose
F f

Transcription

    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • UK Pronunciation
    • UK IPA
    • [fruhk-tohs, froo k-, frook-]
    • /ˈfrʌk toʊs, ˈfrʊk-, ˈfruk-/
    • /ˈfrʊk.təʊs/
    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • [fruhk-tohs, froo k-, frook-]
    • /ˈfrʌk toʊs, ˈfrʊk-, ˈfruk-/

Definitions of fructose word

  • noun fructose Chemistry, Pharmacology. a yellowish to white, crystalline, water-soluble, levorotatory ketose sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , sweeter than sucrose, occurring in invert sugar, honey, and a great many fruits: used in foodstuffs and in medicine chiefly in solution as an intravenous nutrient. 1
  • noun fructose A hexose sugar found especially in honey and fruit. 1
  • uncountable noun fructose Fructose is a sweet substance which occurs naturally in fruit and vegetables. It is sometimes used to make food sweeter. 0
  • noun fructose a white crystalline water-soluble sugar occurring in honey and many fruits. Formula: C6H12O6 0
  • noun fructose a crystalline monosaccharide found in sweet fruits and in honey; fruit sugar; levulose 0
  • noun fructose (biochemistry) A monosaccharide ketose sugar, formula C6H12O6. 0

Information block about the term

Origin of fructose

First appearance:

before 1860
One of the 29% newest English words
First recorded in 1860-65; fruct- + -ose2

Historical Comparancy

Parts of speech for Fructose

noun
adjective
verb
adverb
pronoun
preposition
conjunction
determiner
exclamation

fructose popularity

A common word. It’s meaning is known to most children of preschool age. About 93% of English native speakers know the meaning and use the word.
Most Europeans know this English word. The frequency of it’s usage is somewhere between "mom" and "screwdriver".

fructose usage trend in Literature

This diagram is provided by Google Ngram Viewer

Synonyms for fructose

noun fructose

  • sugar — a sweet, crystalline substance, C 1 2 H 2 2 O 1 1 , obtained chiefly from the juice of the sugarcane and the sugar beet, and present in sorghum, maple sap, etc.: used extensively as an ingredient and flavoring of certain foods and as a fermenting agent in the manufacture of certain alcoholic beverages; sucrose. Compare beet sugar, cane sugar.
  • starch — a white, tasteless, solid carbohydrate, (C 6 H 1 0 O 5) n , occurring in the form of minute granules in the seeds, tubers, and other parts of plants, and forming an important constituent of rice, corn, wheat, beans, potatoes, and many other vegetable foods.
  • lactose — Biochemistry. a disaccharide, C 12 H 22 O 11 , present in milk, that upon hydrolysis yields glucose and galactose.
  • glucose — a sugar, C 6 H 12 O 6 , having several optically different forms, the common dextrorotatory form (dextroglucose, or -glucose) occurring in many fruits, animal tissues and fluids, etc., and having a sweetness about one half that of ordinary sugar, and the rare levorotatory form (levoglucose, or -glucose) not naturally occurring.
  • cellulose — Cellulose is a substance that exists in the cell walls of plants and is used to make paper, plastic, and various fabrics and fibres.

Top questions with fructose

  • what is fructose?
  • what is high fructose corn syrup?
  • how is fructose metabolized?
  • how are refined sugar and high fructose corn syrup different?
  • why is high fructose corn syrup bad?
  • what does high fructose corn syrup do to your body?
  • how much fructose in a banana?
  • which type of macromolecule is the sugar fructose?
  • when fructose and glucose are bonded together they form?
  • when fructose and glucose are bonded together?
  • why is high fructose corn syrup bad for you?
  • how is high fructose corn syrup made?
  • when glucose and fructose join together what do they form?
  • what is crystalline fructose?
  • where is fructose found?

See also

Matching words

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