OK, now the organic acids are a little tricky for the newbs. You're either told by the teacher, or you read it's description somewhere and memorize -- or, you take two years of university Basic Chem, and two years of Organic Chem -- all to learn one tiny fact:
there is a functional group in organic chemistry nomenclature called the carboxyl group. A carbon atom, double bonded to an oxygen atom, bonded to another oxygen, which is bonded to a hydrogen -- will donate that hydrogen, and only that hydrogen*, in aqueous reactions we normally associate with the term acid, according to the Arrhenius** definition of acid.
You will be able to tell by the structure, if you draw it out, insead of just listing the atoms, can you do that for butyric acid?. For example, triprotic acids are very important in biochemical pathways, can you find some examples?
*Disclaimer: under various conditions, other organic compounds may donate a proton, see any common organic chem text for more specificity.
**Disclaimer: there are multiple definitions of the term "acid", see college level chem text for more specifics.