Substituted Hydrocarbon
Substituted hydrocarbon explained in an easy to understand way:


Imagine you're getting ready for a party, but realize your shirt has a stain, so you replace it with a brand-new one. This is similar to a substituted hydrocarbon, where instead of replacing a stained shirt, one or more hydrogen atoms in a hydrocarbon are replaced by other atoms like chlorine or bromine. Just as swapping your shirt changes your outfit's appearance, substituting atoms changes the chemical's properties, altering how it behaves in reactions or interacts with other substances.
Practice Version

Substituted Hydrocarbon: A hydrocarbon with one or more hydrogen atoms replaced by other atoms. Substituted hydrocarbon. In simple terms, a substituted hydrocarbon is a molecule where atoms like chlorine or oxygen replace hydrogen atoms, changing its properties.