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Markovnikov's rule

Markovnikov's rule states that, in chemical reactions found particulary in organic chemistry, when a a hydrogen halide[?] reacts with the carbon-carbon double bond[?] of an unsymmetrical alkene, giving an alkyl halide[?], the hydrogen adds to the carbon of the alkene functional group that has the greater number of hydrogen substituents[?], and the halogen adds to the carbon on the other end of the double bond which has a smaller number of hydrogen substituents.

The rule may be summed up by quoting that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, in that a carbon rich in substituents will get more substituents and the carbon with more hydrogens attached will get the hydrogen in case of many different organic addition reactions[?].



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Thomas a Kempis

... at the time 400 different editions. De Backer (Essai, ut inf.) enumerates 545 Latin and about 900 French editions. Originally written in Latin, a French translation ...

 
 
 
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