coumaric acid
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coumaric acid
Summary
coumaric acid is a group of ortho, meta, para isomers[1]. It draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_ortho_meta_para_isomers category, ranking #7 of 27).[2]
Key Facts
- coumaric acid's instance of is recorded as group of ortho, meta, para isomers[3].
- coumaric acid's instance of is recorded as Wikimedia set index article[4].
- coumaric acid's subclass of is recorded as monohydroxycinnamic acid[5].
- coumaric acid's MeSH descriptor ID is recorded as D003373[6].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as (E)-p-coumaric acid[7].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as 4-coumaric acid[8].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as cis-4-coumaric acid[9].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as 3-coumaric acid[10].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as 3'-hydroxycinnamic acid[11].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as (2E)-2-hydroxycinnamic acid[12].
- coumaric acid's has part is recorded as 2-coumaric acid[13].
- coumaric acid's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0117rbpq[14].
- coumaric acid's MeSH tree code is recorded as D02.241.223.200.210[15].
- coumaric acid's ChEBI ID is recorded as 23401[16].
- coumaric acid's NALT ID is recorded as 16647[17].
- coumaric acid's UMLS CUI is recorded as C0010204[18].
- coumaric acid's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as coumaric-acids[19].
- coumaric acid's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2777903452[20].
- coumaric acid's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C2777903452[21].
Why It Matters
coumaric acid draws 16 Wikipedia views per month (group_of_ortho_meta_para_isomers category, ranking #7 of 27).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]