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4 votes
Which of the following best states the difference between an alcohol and an ether?

In an alcohol, a carbon atom is double bonded to an oxygen atom; in an ether, a carbon atom is triple bonded to another carbon atom.

In an ether, a carbon atom is double bonded to an oxygen atom; in an alcohol, a carbon atom is triple bonded to another carbon atom.

In an alcohol, a carbon atom is single bonded to a hydroxide group (OH–); in an ether, an oxygen atom is single bonded to two carbon atoms.

In an ether, a carbon atom is single bonded to a hydroxide group (OH–); in an alcohol, an oxygen atom is single bonded to two carbon atoms.

2 Answers

4 votes

C. in an alcohol, a carbon atom is single bonded to a hydroxide group (OH_); in an ether, an oxygen atom is single bonded to two carbon atoms.

answered
User Robert Zaremba
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8.4k points
0 votes
I'd say it would be
D
answered
User MQuiroz
by
7.6k points
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