An anomer is a type of stereoisomer and epimer found in carbohydrate chemistry. While an epimer is a stereoisomer that differs in configuration at any single stereogenic center, an anomer is a cyclic saccharide and an epimer that differs in configuration, specifically at the hemiacetal/acetal carbon, also called the anomeric carbon. The anomeric carbon is the carbon derived from the carbonyl carbon (the ketone or aldehyde functional group) of the open-chain form of the carbohydrate molecule. Anomerization is the process of conversion of one anomer to the other.
Two anomers are designated alpha (α) or beta (β), according to the configurational relationship between the anomeric centre and the anomeric reference atom, hence they are relative stereodescriptors. The anomeric centre in hemiacetals is the anomeric carbon C-1. In hemiketals it is the carbon derived from the carbonyl of the ketone (e.g. C-2 in D-fructose). In aldohexoses the anomeric reference atom is the stereocenter that is farthest from anomeric carbon in the ring (the configurational atom, defining the sugar as D or L). In α-D-glucopyranose the reference atom is C-5.
Every morning when I get up
I see your face in my coffee cup
Looking back at me, looking back at me
Another morning, another day
And still I’m feeling the same old way
I’m still missing you, missing you
It should have been easy
It should have been easy
It should have been oh so easy to do
But I’m still getting over you
I keep seeing old friends of mine
They all smile and they say in time
I’ll get over you, I’ll be good as new
I guess somehow some day I will
I’ll forget you, I know, but still
It’ll take some time, it’ll take some time
It should have been easy
It should have been easy
It should have been oh so easy to do
But I’m still getting over you
It should have been easy
It should have been easy
It should have been oh so easy to do