Ovido
Sprache
  • Englisch
  • Spanisch
  • Französisch
  • Portugiesisch
  • Deutsch
  • Italienisch
  • Niederländisch
  • Schwedisch
Text
  • Großbuchstaben

Benutzer

  • Anmelden
  • Konto erstellen
  • Auf Premium upgraden
Ovido
  • Startseite
  • Einloggen
  • Konto erstellen

BIOL 1P91 Midterm

L1: what is Matter?

- anything that has mass and takes up space
- all life forms are composed of matter

- can exist as a: solid, liquid, gas

L1: what are Atoms?

smallest functional units of matter
- form all chemical substances

- each specific type of atom is a chemical element

L1: what are Molecules?

- one or two atoms bonded together

L1: subatomic particle: PROTONS

- positive charge (+)
- found in atomic nucleus

L1: subatomic particle: Neutrons

- neutral
- found in atomic nucleus

- help stabilize the nucleus

L1: subatomic particle: Electrons

- negative charge (-)
- found in orbitals

L1: True or false, protons and electrons are present in equal amounts and it is only the number of neutrons that changes

true

L1: true or false, scientists initially viewed atoms as a miniture solar system

true

L1: true or false, a better model of an atom is a central nucleus surrounded by cloudlike orbitals

true

L1: what are noble gases and where are they located on the periodic table?

- elements that have their shells completely full
- VERY unreactive, quite stable

- 8th column on periodic table

L1: what is the octet rule?

- tendency of atoms to prefer to have 8 electrons in the valence shell
- with less than 8 electrons, will tend to form compounds


exception is hydrogen which fills its outer shell with just 2 electrons

L1: how many electrons max in the 1st and 2nd shell?

- 2 in the first one, 8 in the second one

L1: true or false, it is the number of protons that distinguishes one element from another?

- true

L1: atomic number?

- the charge number of an atomic nucleus
- equals the number of protons

- the periodic table is organized by the atomic number

L1: what do the rows and columns correspond to?

Rows = number of electron shells
Columns = from left to right, the numbers of electrons in the outer shell (# of valence electrons)

L1: true or false, elements in the same column share properties but are not interchangeable?

true

L1: Atomic mass?

- indicates an atom's mass relative to the mass of other atoms
- protons and neutrons are nearly equal in mass (both are more than 1,800 times the mass of an electron)

- is the averages of the masses of different isotopes of an element


atomic mass = protons + neutrons

L1: Radioisotopes?

- will decay into lower mass forms
- unstable

- emit radiation as they decay

- used in medicine for cancer treatment, imaging


ex.) carbon 14 is unstable and will decay

L1: Mass vs. Weight?

Mass = the same in all locations, an absolute value
Weight = based on the gravitational pull on a given mass,

L1: Units - Dalton

(Da)
- measurement for atomic mass

- also known as atomic mass unit (amu)

- 1 Da = 1/12 the mass of a carbon atom

L1: Units - Mole

- 1 mole of any element contains the same number of atoms
- Avogadro's number

- 6.022 x 10 (to the 23)


- used to convert between mass and the number of protons

L1: Isotopes?

- multiple forms of an element that differ in the number of neutrons

ex.) C12 and C14

C12= 6 protons and 6 neutrons

C14 = 6 protons and 8 neutrons

L1: what is the building block of all living matter (the most abundant)?

carbon

L1: True or false: hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen make up about 95% of the atoms in living organisms?

True

(hydrogen and oxygen occur primarily in water)

(nitrogen is found in proteins)

L3: True or false, properties of a compound can be drastically different than the properties of the individual elements in the compound?

True

L3: Covalent bond (1/3)?

- electrons are shared (in order to fill valence shells)
can either be: polar covalent or nonpolar covalent


Polar covalent: more electronegative towards one atom

- between atoms of diff electronegativity

- unequal distribution creates a polarity (difference in electric charge) - mainly polar interactions

ex.) 0.4 to 0.8


Nonpolar covalent: 50 50 sharing

- between atoms with electronegativities

- no charge difference across molecule

- no possibility of hydrogen bonding with nonpolar covalent bonding

ex.) < 0.4


THE STRONGEST BOND!

L3: Hydrogen bond (2/3)

- hydrogen atom from one polar molecule is attracted to an electronegative atom from another molecule
- "not a sharing of the electrons, it's the attraction"

weaker but more numorous

- can be disrupted easily in water


- represented as dashed or dotted lines

L3: Ionic Bond (3/3)

electrons are transferred, forming ions

(one atom was so strong it pulled the atom from another towards it)


ex.) > 1.8

L3: what are Van der Waals dispersion forces?

- transient attraction (different than the other interactions)
- another type of weak molecular attraction

- created when electrons are located within orbitals in a random way

- FLEETING ELECTRICAL ATTRACTION: collective strength can be quite strong

- little spaces of charge


- mainly nonpolar interactions

L4: Cations? Anions?

Cations: have a net positive charge (+) -donate electrons

Anions: have a net negative charge (-) -mainly acquire the electrons




IONIC BONDS OCCUR WHEN A CATION BINDS TO AN ANION BY ELECTROSTATIC ATTRACTION

L4: Ca2+ = ?, Cl- = ?, H+ = ?, Mg2+ = ?

Ca2+ = lost 2 electrons
Cl- = gained one electron

H+ = lost one electron

Mg2+ = lost 2 electrons

L4: what does it mean to be SATURATED?

- having double bonds

L4: when referring to molecular shape/structure, RIGID means what?

- refers to how it is more difficult to rotate (not that it breaks easily)

L4: shape is determined by _____________ and ________ of ______ between atoms

determined by the arrangement and number of bonds between atoms

ex.) Carbon oxygen molecule with double bonds will have a planar arrangement

L4: True or false, noncovalent interactions may alter the shape of molecules?

- true

L4: Free radicals

- molecule containing an atom with a single, unpaired electron in its outer shell
- highly reactive molecule (can "steal" an electron from other molecules)

- can form exposure to radiation and some toxins

- can cause cell damage, kill invading bacteria

- will react almost instantly

L4: Chemical reactions

Chemical reactions:
- when one or more substances are changed into other substances

- reactants to products


- require a source of energy (ex. heat, ATP)

- often require an enzyme as a catalyst (speeds reaction rate)

- occur in liquid (water) -like most things in bio

L4: Properties of water (solution, solute, solvent)

Solution = solutes in a solvent (the liquid, in bio it's water)
Solutes = dissolved substances

Solvent = the liquid

L4: SOLUTES: Hydrophilic, hydrophobic, amphipathic

HYDROPHILIC: "water-loving"
- readily dissolve in water

- ionic and/or polar covalent bonds


HYDROPHOBIC: "water-fearing"

- do not dissolve in water

- nonpolar molecules like hydrocarbons, oils


AMPHIPATHIC: "both loves"

- both polar/ionized and nonpolar regions

- may form micelles in water

ex.) detergent is an amphipathic molecule

- have hydrophobic and hydrophilic properties

L4: Concentration?

- amount of a solute dissolved in a unit volume of solution
generally in gram/liter

L4: Molarity?

= number of moles of a solute dissolved in 1 Liter of water

L5: Heat of vaporization? Heat of fusion?

Heat of vaporization: energy to boil
Heat of fusion: energy to melt


- water is extremely stable as a liquid, due to high heats of vaporization and fusion, and high specific heat

L5: what is Specific Heat?

- the amount of heat energy to raise the temperature 1 degrees Celsius

L5: what influences the temperature at which a solution freezes or boils?

- by the amounts of dissolved solutes

adding solutes to water:

- lowers the freezing point (below 0)

- raises the boiling point (above 100)

L5: name some of water's functions in living organisms?

- participants in chemical reactions
- force or support

- removes toxic waste components

- evaporative cooling

- cohesion (molecules of same type attract each other) and adhesion (unlike molecules attract each other)

- surface tension (measure of attraction between molecules at the surface of a liquid)

- lubrication

L5: Acids?

molecules that release hydrogen ions in solution

- strong acid releases MORE H+ than a weak acid

L5: Bases?

lowers the H+ concentration
- some release OH-

- others bind H+

L5: the pH scale?

pH 0-6 = Acidic solutions (0 is most acidic) ex.) stomach fluid, lemon juice
pH 7 = Neutral solutions

pH 8-14 = Alkaline solutions (14 is most basic) ex.) bleach, baking soda

L5: what can the pH of a solution affect?

- the shapes and functions of molecules
- rates of chemical reactions

- ability of two molecules to bind to each other

- ability of ions or molecules to dissolve in water

L5: what do BUFFERS do?

- buffers help to maintain a constant pH (organisms usually only tolerate only small changes in pH)

L5: what is an ACID-BASE BUFFER system?

can shift to remove or release H+ to adjust for changes in pH

L6: what are MACROMOLECULES

- large, complex organic molecules

L6: True or false, organic molecules contain CARBON?

true

L6: functional groups? - list them (5)

groups of atoms with special chemical features that are functionally important
- each type of functional group exhibits the same properties in all molecules in which it occurs


ex.) Amino, Carbonyl, Aldehyde, Carboxyl, Hydroxyl

L6: what are some functional groups that bond to carbon? (list the 4)

- methyl (CH3) - nonpolar
- Phosphate (PO4 2-) - backbone of DNA molecules - polar

- Sulfate (SO4-) - polar

- Sulfhydryl (SH) also known as thiol - polar

L6: what are isomers? difference between Structural isomers and Stereoisomers?

two molecules with an identical molecular formula but different structures and characteristics

Structural isomers: contain the same atoms but in different bonding relationships


Stereoisomers: identical bonding relationships, but the spatial positioning of the atoms differs in the two isomers

-> Cis-trans isomers: positioning around the double bond

-> Enantiomers: mirror image molecules (clearly see that they are different) -diff. in orientation leads to diff. binding abilities

L6: polymer formation by CONDENSATION reactions (also known as dehydration reactions)

- a molecule of water is removed (each time a new monomer is added)
- process repeats to form long polymers

- process catalyzed by enzymes

- produces a larger organic molecule plus a water molecule

L6: breakdown of a polymer by HYDROLYSIS reactions (also known as hydration reaction)

- molecule of water is added back (each time a monomer is released)
- process repeats to break down long polymer

- process is catalyzed by enzymes

L6: what are the 4 major classes of organic molecules found in living cells

Carbohydrates (composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms) Cn(HnO)n -the n's have to have the same number
Lipids

Proteins

Nucleic acids

L6: what are monosaccharides?

- means one sugar
- most common are 5 (pentoses) or 6 carbons (hexose)

L6: a- and b-glucose (stereoisomers of glucose)

- hydroxyl group of carbon 1 is above or below ring

alpha = hydroxyl is on opposite side as carbon 6

beta = hydroxyl is on same side as carbon 6

L6: D- and L-glucose (stereoisomers of glucose)

- enantiomers with mirror image structure

D-glucose = commonly found in living cells

L-glucose = rarely found in living cells

L6: what are disaccharides?

- composed of 2 monosaccharides
- joined by dehydration or condensation reaction

-> glycosidic bond

ex.) sucrose, maltose, lactose

L7: what are polysaccharides?

- many monosaccharides linked together to form long polymers
ex.) energy storage(starch, glycogen), structural (cellulose, chitin)

L7: Lipids

- are NOT polymers
- mainly hydrogen, carbon and some oxygen atoms

- are NONPOLAR (therefore very insoluble in water)

L7: Fats

- fats and oils are essentially the same thing (fats are solid)
also known as TRIGLYCERIDES

- formed by bonding glycerol to 3 fatty acids

- joined by dehydration (resulting bonds are ester bonds)

Energy storage

Structural: provide insulation

L7: Saturated vs. Unsaturated fatty acids?

Saturated - all carbons have the maximal amount of hydrogens
- tend to be solid at room temp.


Unsaturated - contains one or more double bonds (=not all the possible amount of hydrogen on the carbons)

- tend to be liquid at room temp.


Cis forms naturally, trans formed artificially(linked to disease)

- Cis bonds creates kinks in the fatty acid

L7: what is a PHOSPHOLIPID comprised of?

- two fatty acids and a phosphate group
- amphipathic molecule

Phosphate head: polar/hydrophilic (polar heads will face outside)

Fatty acid head: nonpolar/hydrophobic

L7: STERIODS

- four interconnected rings of carbon atoms
- insoluble in water


ex.) cholestrol

L7: WAXES

- all contain 1 or more hydrocarbons and long structures that resemble a fatty acid attached by its carboxyl group to another long hydrocarbon chain
- very NONPOLAR (barrier to water loss)

L7: PROTEINS

- composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and small amounts of other elements like sulfur

- amino acids are the building blocks

L7: Amino Acid structure (name the 4 parts)

the carbon makes 4 bonds to:
1. a hydrogen

2. amino acid side chain (represented by a R) *20 diff amino acids*

3. carboxyl group (C03)

4. Amino group (NH3)

L8: what is a POLYPEPTIDE?

- POLYMERS OF AMINO ACIDS (amino groups joined by dehydration reaction)
- PROF THINKS THAT PROTEINS ARE POLYPEPTIDES

L8: which amino acid is the N-terminus or the C-terminus?

N-terminus = the amino acid at the beginning of the protein
C-terminus = the last amino acid

L8: Protein hierarchy of structure (4 progessive levels)

1. Primary
- linear sequence of the amino acids


2. Secondary

- sequences of amino acids together

- either a spiral (alpha helix) or sheet (beta pleated sheet)


3. Tertiary

- secondary structures and random coils folded into a 3D shape


4. Quaternary

- 2 or more polypeptides binded together

- form a functional protein

L8: what are 5 factors that promote protein folding and stability?

- hydrogen bonds
- ionic bonds and other polar interactions

- hydrophobic effects

- Van der Waals forces

- Disulphide bridges

L8: protein-protein interactions

- specific binding at surface
- two or more different proteins interact

L9: Anfinsen's beliefs on proteins

- proteins contain all the info necessary to fold into their proper conformation
- proteins spontaneously assume their most stable conformation


SINCE THEN HAVE LEARNED THAT PROTEINS DO REQUIRE ASSISTANCE IN FOLDING

L9: what are 4 domains of proteins?

1. Ligand binding
2. DNA binding

3. Nuclear localization domain

4. Activation domain (a protein fold that activates genes)


PROTEINS THAT SHARE A PARTICULAR DOMAIN ALSO SHARE THE ASSOCIATED FUNCTION

L9: Nucleic acids: what are they and what are the 2 classes?

responsible for the storage, expression, and transmission of genetic information

1. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)

-> stores genetic info encoded in the sequence of nucleotide monomers


2. Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

-> decodes DNA into instructions for linking together a specific sequence of amino acids to form a polypeptide chain

L9: what is a nucleotide made of? what are they linked by?

- made of a PHOSPHATE GROUP
- a FIVE-CARBON SUGAR (either ribose or deoxyribose)

- a SINGLE OR DOUBLE RING (of carbon and nitrogen atoms) = known as a base


- nucleotides are linked into a polymer by a SUGAR-PHOSPHATE BACKBONE

L9: what are PURINES and PYRIMIDINES?

Purines: nucleotides of ADENINE (A) and GUANINE (G)
-> double cyclic


Pyrimidines: nucleotides of CYTOSINE (C) and THYMINE (T)

-> single cyclic

L9: DNA

- consists of two stands of nucleotides coiled around each other in a double helix
- held together by hydrogen bonds (between a purine base in one strand and a pyrimidine base in the opposite strand)


A PAIRS WITH T, AND C PAIRS WITH G

L9: DNA vs. RNA

DNA:
- deoxyribonucleic acid

- deoxyribose

- thymine (T)

- A, G, C used in both

- 2 strands, double helix

- 1 form

- does not have oxygen on the 2nd carbon


RNA:

- ribonucleic acid

- ribose

- Uracil (U)

- A, G, C used in both

- single strand

- several forms

- has an oxygen on the 2nd carbon

L10: what are the two main life goals of living organisms?

survive and reproduce

L10: What are two or more atoms of the same kind called?

- a molecule

L10: what are two or more atoms of different kind called?

- a compound

L10: energy relationships involving interactions among the electrons or reacting atoms

= chemical bonds

L10: the sum total of all chemical reactions that occur within an organism?

= metabolism

L10: matter may be changed _____________ and _______________

Physically:
- changes do not alter the basic nature of a substance

ex.) changes in the state of matter (solid, liquid, gas)


Chemically:

- changes alter the chemical composition of a substance

L10: the ability to do work

= energy
- has no mass and does not take up space

L10: Kinetic energy

= energy is doing work
- associated with movement


ex.) hand with hammer swinging down

L10: Potential energy

- energy held up by an object because its position relative to other objects (hand raised above a nail, not swinging the hammer)

L10: Thermodynamics

- study of energy interconversions
(energy being converted from one form to another)

L10: what is the First Law of Thermodynamics?

energy cannot be created or detroyed, but can be transformed from one type to another

L10: Second Law of Thermodynamics?

transfer of energy from one form to another increases the entropy (degree of disorder) of a system
- as entropy increases, less energy is available for organisms to use to promote change or do work

L10: what is free energy and what symbol represents it?

Free energy = amount of energy available to do work
= (G)

also called Gibbs free energy


Gibbs free energy = to predict whether a chemical process is spontaneous or non-spontaneous

L10: H = G + TS

H = enthalpy or total energy
G = free energy or amount of energy for work

S = entropy or unusable energy

T = absolute temperature in Kelvin (K)

L10: what makes a reaction spontaneous?

occur WITHOUT input of additional energy to proceed naturally
- may need to provide some activation energy

-> once the reaction has started, the rest will proceed without the need of a continous input of an external source of energy

eg.) Combustion


-just because it is spontaneous doesn't mean that it is fast

L10: a non-spontaneous reaction?

- a continuous energy input is necessary for the reaction to proceed

eg.) photosynthesis: requires constant source of energy (in the form of sunlight) to drive chemical reactions

L10: Exergonic and Endergonic reactions

Exergonic = spontaneous
- change in G is less than zero (neg. free energy change)

- energy is released by reaction


Endergonic = not spontaneous

- change in G is greater than zero (pos. free energy change)

- requires addition of energy to drive reaction

L11: True or false, an endergonic reaction can be coupled to an exergonic reaction so that the two reactions overall is thermodynamically favored

true

L11: True or false, ATP is the major 'energy' molecule produced by metabolism: it's dispatched to wherever a non-spontaneous reaction needs to occur within the cell

True!

L11: do cells use ATP hydrolysis to drive reactions?

Yes!
- typical cells use millions of ATP molecules per second to drive endergonic processes

L11: what are CATALYSTS?

- an agent that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction without being consumed during the reaction

L11: what are ENZYMES?

- protein catalysts in living cells
- act as biological catalysts

- increase the rate of chemical reactions

- bind to substrates at an active site to catalyze reactions

- can be recognized by their suffix: hydrolase, oxidase

L11: what are RIBOZYMES?

RNA molecules with catalytic properties

L11: what is HYDROLASE (an enzyme)?

enzymes that facilitate the cleavage of bonds in molecules with the addition of the elements of water -they help to break down

L11: ACTIVATION ENERGY

what is it: initial input of energy to start reaction
- allows molecules to get close enough to cause bond rearrangement


how to overcome it:

- large amounts of heat

- using enzymes to lower activation energy

L11: how do enzymes lower activation energy?

- straining bonds in reactants make it easier to achieve transition state
- positioning reactants together to facilitate bonding

- enzymes bring reactants together, so they don't have to expend energy moving about until they collide at random

L11: Location where reaction takes place?

ACTIVE SITE

L11: reactions that bind to active site?

SUBSTRATES

L11: formed when enzyme and substrate bind?

ENZYME SUBSTRATE COMPLEX

L11: enzyme affinity and saturation?

Affinity: degree of attraction between an enzyme and its substrate
Saturation: plateau where nearly all active sites are occupied by substrate

L12: Enzyme inhibitors: Competitive and Non-competitive

Enzyme inhibitors: molecules that interact w/ enzymes in some way and reduce the rate of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction or prevent enzymes to work in a normal matter

Competitive: inhibitor molecules binds to active site

- direct competition with the substrate

- inhibits ability of substrate to bind = Km needs to increase as more substrate needed

- in the system is swamped with substrate, it would knock out the inhibitor



Non-competitive: lowers Vmal without affecting Km

- inhibitor binds to allosteric site(another spot on the enzyme), not active

- causes a shape change in the enzyme

L12: Small molecules permanently attached to the enzyme and aids in enzyme function

prosthetic groups
ex.) FAD

L12: Usually inorganic ion that temporarily binds to enzyme to promote a chemical reaction

Cofactor

L11: organic molecule that participates in reaction but is left unchanged afterward

Coenzyme
ex.) NAD

L12: difference between ANABOLIC metabolic pathways and CATABOLIC metabolic pathways?

Anabolic:
- synthesis of cellular components (to build bigger molecules)

- endergonic (must be coupled to exergonic reactions

ex.) Amino acids --> proteins (through dehydration reactions)


Catabolic:

- breakdown cellular components(reactants)

- used for recycling building blocks

- used for energy to drive endergonic reactions

- exergonic

ex.) Glycolysis (breakdown of sugar)

L12: what are two ways to make ATP?

1. Substrate-level phosphorylation: The enzyme directly transfers phosphate from one molecule to another molecule

2. Chemiosmosis: energy stored in an electrochemical gradient is used to make ATP from ADP and P

L12: how are electrons shuttled? Redox reactions!

- the reactions in which NAD+ and FAD gain or lose electrons

LEO says GER

(losing electrons = oxidation)

(gaining electrons = reduction)


cellular respiration involves many reactions in which electrons are passed from one molecule to another

L12: Regulation of metabolic pathways: gene regulation, cellular regulation, biochemical regulation, recycling of organic molecules

Gene regulation: turn genes on or off that encode for the creation of enzymes

Cellular regulation: cell-signaling pathways like hormones (i.e. targeted on and off switch via chemical messenger)


Biochemical regulation: feedback inhibition: product of pathway


Recycling of organic molecules:

- most large molecules exist for a relatively short time

- RNA and proteins are made when needed and broken down when not needed

L12: Half-life?

time it takes for 50% of the molecules to be broken down and recycled

L12: Proteasome

large complex that breaks down proteins using protease enzymes
- they cleave bonds between amino acids (tags a target protein with ubiquitin and breaks up the protein into individual monomers)

L12: what does UBIQUITIN TAGGING allow for? (3 answers)

1. degrade improperly folded proteins
2. rapidly degrade proteins to respond to changing cell conditions

3. recycle amino acids for new proteins

L12: function of LYSOSOMES?

1. contain hydrolases to break down proteins, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and lipids
2. digest substances: taken up by endocytosis

3. Autophagy: recycling worn-out organelles using an autophagosome -> this process delivers the organelles to the lysosomes

L13: what is definition of cellular respiration and what is its aim?

a process by which living cells obtain energy from organic molecules and release waste products

Primary aim: to make ATP

L13: Difference between EUKARYOTES and PROKARYOTES?

Eukaryotes
- have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

- larger

- more complex cell structure

- DNA in nucleus

- plants, animals, fungi


Prokaryotes

- lack a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

- simple structure

- DNA in cytoplasm

- bacteria, archaea

L13: basic overview of glucose metabolism

- when glucose is broken down, some of the energy is lost as heat but much of it is used to make 3 energy intermediates: ATP, NADH, FADH2

L13: what are the 4 metabolic pathways?

1. Glycolysis - in cytosol
2. Breakdown of pyruvate - in mitochondrial matrix

3. Citric acid cycle - in mitochondrial matrix

4. Oxidative phosphorylation - in mitochondria (inner membrane)

L13: One turn of the Citric Acid cycle produces what?

- 2 CO2, 1ATP, 3 NADH, 1 FADH2

L15: what are the two main goals of the ETC?

1. oxidizing high energy intermediates (which releases protons)
2. Uses energy to pump the protons into the outer membrane space


**moves against the gradient** going from inner to outer membrane

L15: what does ATP and ADP stand for?

ATP = Adenosine Triphosphate
ADP = Adenosine Diphosphate

Quiz
voc 5 (The uneducated American)
Parcial I
phytochemistry
go and leave french
PRELIM (101-150)
UTSChapter 3:the sociological self Chapter 4:The Anthropological self Chapter 5:The psychological self
ablut relationship
ideolierg Provet
Circular Motion
Ang_1
NBCD 3
social science
GEOTECHENGG LAST QUIZ - TERMS
English vocabulary
Designadores de aeropuertos
Amino acids letter code
Oral com 3
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 16(hal 64,65)
Biology 12
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 15(hal 58-59,60,61,62,63,64)
E-12 Anglo-Saxon Exam
rbueigyiwrg7ir
Notes on the Music of the Classical Period The Classical era in music, also know
genetic Materials
allemand mots
Oral Com 1
PRELIM (51-100)
Ekonomistyrning
Hoofdstuk 1,2,3
Cirkulation
PRELIM (1-50)
what is a business?
Biologi kroppen åk 8 Kap 6.1
latin
Historia universal
Dacriocistitis, ectropión y entropión
bio 2 exam diapo systeme dygestif
Epiescleritis y Queratitis
STRATEGY FORMULATION
Conjuntivitis bacteriana y vernal
DLD EXAM REVIEWER
sts L4 M
Tracoma
Spelling
Math
Math
Line
DM manifestaciones oculares
.....
incas
FeuerwehrFragen
Computer Science Test Y8 Unit1Test me on my computer science.
atomic structure
Český jazyk
New words v.41
chem 30 oct exam
geo 20 oct exam
math 20 oct exam
ela 20 oct exam
bio 30 oct exam
BLED CHAP 38
STS L1 M
v.42
EDP
BLED CHAP 13
sts L2 M
philo
Math by Clarissa
pyschology RM key terms
chap.7 derivations
Latin chap.7 vocab
LO2
Midterms: ELEC
Jugo gástrico
sarastudio
Parts of the Microscope 🔬
Parts of the Microscope 🔬
NBCD 2
41
PSY chap 3
Orzuelo, chalazión, pinguécula, pterigión, blefaritis
Sistema respiratorio
Cataratas
Quizz Ofta
Biology of cells
schema narratif
BIO topic 5
mögen
psicologia generale
kemi
Woorden H2
Spanska v. 41
Bindweefsel
Foo m2
Woorden H1
memory
oral - copy - copy
Grunder i belysningsteknik, del B
Grunder i belsyningsteknik, del A
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 14(hal 53,54,55,56,57,58-59)
NBCD 1
Anatomía
Kata Benda Dasar
phyc
CELAW QUIZ 4
Inglês Objetos
Palavras(verbos) p1
L'ete de Richard (Pre-IB French 10)
PSY chap 5
Nenasycené uhlovodíky
M4 Quantidade de matéria
Gontrastive grammar in Translation
balance of payments of current accounts
unit 7 words
CHN
Midterms: UTS
Midterms: SMP
Nasycené uhlovodíky
sts L3 M
Finance d'entrepriseChapitre 1
Droit des sociétés
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 13(hal 50,51,52,53)
ENGLISHMICE, tourism and economy
Exámen de derecho
voc 4
etimologias
Grec moderne - son des lettres
Grec ancien - son des lettres
bio 12 quiz on Macro molecules - copy
Alphabet grec moderne - nom des lettres
Independencia de México
Alphabet grec ancien - nom des lettres
Flash cards
Todas as essenciais teoristas da enfermagem e
Protists Kingdoms/Division
Anatomia ocular
so prov
engels leren - kopie
Extra woorden H2
engels leren
Extra woorden H1
tp key words hinduism
Respiratoriska systemet
figure retoriche
Armaturegenskaper - Belysningsprinciper, ljusfördelning och verkningsgradklar.
fluid mechanicstrial 0.2
PSY chap 2
Computer science Test 1
revisão verd. ou fals. Constit.
Funçoes inorganicas (acidos,bases,sais,nox)
RPH MIDTERMS
atividade revisão TGP
v.41
Midterms: NSTP 1
BLED CHAP 58
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 12(hal 46,47,48,49,50)
101-125.
ART APP MIDTERMS
CHAP 59 BLED
Inflation
economics 2
IATA-codes
MAPEH MUSIC 2ND QUARTER
Medicina
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT TEST II
Week 5 - Appendicular Skeleton (Chapter 8)
Genetics and modern evolutionary synthesis
basic english
BIO 2 EXAM 2
2546- Labour And Delivery
Theory of evolution
Midterm
Quadratic Expressions (gr 10 math)
German speaking projects 1
2546- Third Trimester
Patologia generale
Scentific method
Atrama ir judėjimas
GOVERNANCE & DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
Augalo organizmas
gyvybes ivairove
H1
bio
duits H1 (4)
geschiedenis 1.1 2.1
no kärnfysik åk9 nr2
duits H1 (3)
duits
inicio del desarrollo del sistema circulatorio
Duits 2 H 1 woordjes
english week 41
derecho
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 11(hal 43,44,45,46)
BRW
segmentación y delaminación del mesodermo
Glossary Vocab Qiuz
Test 2
2546- Second Trimester
2546- First Trimester
homework
demografi migration etc
Karens Midterm
Afrikaans se instruksies
Hjärtat
geography case studies
frans
duits H1 (2)
duits H1
SO-cold war
Laboratório Anexo3Medição em Química
SPANISHI would like
Salesforce data cloud 2024
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 10(hal 37,38,39,40-41,43)
QUIZ Ethics
NSTPdrrm
312
bio 12 quiz on Macro molecules
no kärnfysik
Normalvärden, triage och HLR
Week 4 - Joints (Chapter 9)
6.1 ( school subjects spanish)
5.3 (directions spanish)
5.2 ( why you go there spanish)
5.1 (Places in town Spanish)
voc 5 (The death penalty)
Palavras ou expressões p1 em inglêsP1
unidad 2
p
O
MIDTERMS THEORY
Glosor
COUNTRIES CAPITAL AND CURRENCIESby Ayaz Sindhi
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 9(hal 34,35,36,37)
OB
FREN 3P03 VOCABULAIRE
Ite 366
Parcial 1
Quiz Gine Parcial
S&A
gr 9 science exam 1
Week 6 - Nervous System Chapter 12
Week 5 - Axial Skeleton (Chapter 7)
FREN 3P03
Diritto PrivatoIl diritto è un sistema di regola per la soluzione di conflitti fra gli uomini.
Chapter 21 vessels
NO
ses
MAD Mobile Application development MIDTERM part 2
MAD Mobile Application development MIDTERM part 1
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 5 part 2
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 5 part 1
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 4 part 4
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 4 part 3
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 4 part 2
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 4 part 1
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 3
MAD Mobile Application development chapter 2
MAD Mobile Application develooment chapter 1 part 2
MAD Mobile Application develooment chapter 1 part 1
Ganda - copy
ak hoofdstuk 1 havo 2
ITP
glosor V.40
kap 7
Duits woordenlijst
Kompletering prefix små tal
にほんごの質問
Matte complwtering prefix stora tal
Grunder i belysningsteknik övningstenta A+BÖvningstenta
STAINS
zahlen
frage wörter
Konjugation verben auf -ar
Konjugation ser
3Osso dell'anca, ileo, ischio, pube
LO1
Glosor v41
FRÅGOR
KOTOBA PM LEMBAR 8(hal 31,32,33,34)
banking gk and awareness
Fysik 5.1 , 5.2 Rörelse åk 8
Anatomofisiologia
CHAPTER 4
anatomia 2 parcial
French and indian warSTUDY
systeme nerveux
Enzymes, Chemical Peels, Circadia Cocoa Enzyme Lactic Acid Treatment
intrinsic aging and hormones
koder pli
Vicios del lenguaje
burn
wound
Auf die Räder
auro
cosmeceuticals
galvanic
Science 9 test 1
neurulacion
come si scirvere un cv
CVlinguaggio formale. come scivere una cover letter.
notocorda
anglais
definition and characteristics of rubrics
les autochtones
ORG AGRI REVIEWER
vocabulaire 1er chapitre term
Kapitel 10
intrinsic aging and hormones
Kapitel 9
FOLA M1
Auteurs sociologie contemporaine
Genesis 1:2 And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the
sinterizzazione
Kapitel 1 - copy
BASIC KEYBOARDING
1L1M Understanding the self
ROTC