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starch vs polyose

polyose vs starch

starch and polyose both are nouns.

starch is a verb but polyose is not a verb.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
starch Yes No Yes No
polyose Yes No No No
As nouns, polyose is a hypernym of starch; that is, polyose is a word with a broader meaning than starch:
  • starch: a complex carbohydrate found chiefly in seeds, fruits, tubers, roots and stem pith of plants, notably in corn, potatoes, wheat, and rice; an important foodstuff and used otherwise especially in adhesives and as fillers and stiffeners for paper and textiles
  • polyose: any of a class of carbohydrates whose molecules contain chains of monosaccharide molecules
Other hypernyms of starch include polysaccharide.
starch (noun) polyose (noun)
a complex carbohydrate found chiefly in seeds, fruits, tubers, roots and stem pith of plants, notably in corn, potatoes, wheat, and rice; an important foodstuff and used otherwise especially in adhesives and as fillers and stiffeners for paper and textiles any of a class of carbohydrates whose molecules contain chains of monosaccharide molecules
a commercial preparation of starch that is used to stiffen textile fabrics in laundering
starch (verb) polyose (verb)
stiffen with starch
Difference between starch and polyose

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