Words and phrases that have a meaning related to hydrolysis:  (175 results)
Often used in the same context:
polymerisation, epoxide, adsorption, oxidation, cyclization, polymerization, pyrophosphate, chemisorption, saccharification, formate, amide, hemicellulose, alkynes, triphosphate, oxidative phosphorylation, isomerization, reactant, oligosaccharides, glycerol, nitration, xylan, molecular sieve, hydroperoxide, asparagine, gelation, alkyl, recrystallization, supernatant, aqueous solution, naoh, monosaccharide, lactone, disaccharide, uracil, anionic, saponification, stoichiometry, alkene, quinone, desorption, denaturation, borane, cationic, proteolysis, oligomer, horseradish peroxidase, nadph, dehydrogenation, dimethyl, lignocellulose, centrifugation, dextran, flocculation, cellulase, arabinose, xylose, hydrophobicity, peroxidase, pyrimidine, tetramer, nitrogenous, carbene, hydride, biosynthesis, purine, ferrocene, alkanes, thiourea, glycoside, histidine, pearlite, porphyrin, glycolipids, solutes, endonuclease, mannose, elastic modulus, micelle, glucosides, hydrogenation, exocytosis, pyruvate, solvation, carboxylic acid, lysis, zeolites, hydroxide, bilayers, agarose, thiols, polycondensation, saccharide, alkylation, trypsin, bilayer, enthalpy, calcination, aryl, disulfide, microsomes, allantoin, cofactor, acetylation, solubilization, inactivation, deactivation, leaching, decarboxylation, depolymerization, decomposition, degradation, dissociation, methylation, elution, esterification, hydrolytic, citric, phenol, sulfuric, synthesis, thaw, acetic, activation, cleavage, degradative, formaldehyde, formic, hydrochloric, inhibition, isoelectric, labeling, lactic, permanganate, alloying
Also try:
— Adjectives for hydrolysis: enzymatic, alkaline, partial, complete, acid, enzymic, catalyzed, rapid, mild, subsequent, further, more...

Commonly used words are shown in bold. Rare words are dimmed.
Click on a word above to view its definition.
Organize by: [Relation]   Letters Show rare words: [Yes]   No Show phrases:  [Yes]   No