oh wow, no i'm very sorry
i actually confused myself... what i meant to ask my prof in my email was not about a free AA at all, but a dipeptide...
so basically this whole time i was just confusing myself because i accidentally put "free AA" in the email!
wow that sucks
thank you nox, and spirochete,
"This is really a question of semantics. You already understand that there's resonance there. The question is does it qualify as conjugation." ... that was exactly my problem, except i made it even worse because i asked about the "free AA" in the email!
so one last question
nox implied this, and spirochete you said...
"Note that this lone pair has to be in a P orbital to be delocalized through resonance"
so just to make sure, the nitrogen is sp2 hybridized, with that lone pair in a single P orbital,
and the nitrogen is not sp3 hybridized.
so basically, bottom line -- according to my professors definition of 3 parallel, adjacent, p orbitals constituting conjugation, the a dipeptide would be considered "conjugated" as nox showed. but probabaly according to a more advanced definition (comment about cumulation), its really not considered conjugation.
would that be correct?