Carbonyl—A double bond between a carbon and an oxygen.
Carboxylic  acid—A  functional  group   that    contains    a   carbonyl    and a   hydroxyl    group   on  the same
carbon  (RCOOH).
Carboxylic  acid    derivative—A    compound    that    can be  created from    a   carboxylic  acid    by  nucleophilic
acyl    substitution;   includes    anhydrides, esters, amides, and others.
Chemical    properties—Characteristics  of  compounds   that    change  chemical    composition during  a
reaction;   determine   how a   molecule    will    react   with    other   molecules.
Chemical    shift   (δ)—An  arbitrary   variable    used    to  plot    NMR spectra;    measured    in  parts   per million
(ppm).
Chemoselectivity—A reaction’s preference for one location over another within a molecule.
Chiral—A    molecule    or  carbon  atom    bonded  to  four    different   groups  and without a   plane   of
symmetry;   thus,   it  is  not superimposable  on  its mirror  image   and has an  enantiomer.
Chiral center—Atoms that are chiral within a molecule.
Chromatography—A    tool    used    to  separate    compounds   based   on  how strongly    they    adhere  to  a
stationary  phase   or  travel  with    a   mobile  phase.
Cis—A molecule in which the two substituents are on the same side of an immovable bond.
Cis–trans   Isomers—Diastereomers   with    different   arrangements    of  substituents    around  an
immovable   bond.
Column  chromatography—A    type    of  chromatography  that    uses    a   column  filled  with    silica  or
alumina beads   as  an  adsorbent,  allowing    for separation; uses    gravity to  move    the solvent and
compounds   down    the column.
Condensation    reaction—A  reaction    that    combines    two molecules   into    one,    with    the loss    of  a   small
molecule.
