| colony |
a body of people who settle far from home but maintain ties with their homeland; inhabitants remain nationals of their home state but are not literally under the home state's system of government a group of animals of the same type living together one of the 13 British colonies that formed the original states of the United States a geographical area politically controlled by a distant country (microbiology) a group of organisms grown from a single parent cell
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| colony |
(col
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
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| colony |
----In politics and in history, a colony is a territory under the immediate political control of a geographically-distant state (or city, in ancient times). Some colonies were historically separate countries, while others were territories without definite statehood at the moment of colonization. The metropolitan state is the state that owns the colony. In Ancient Greece, the city that owned a colony was called the metropolis within its political organization. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony
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| colony |
1. An aggregate of identical cells (clones) derived from a single progenitor cell.
Ãâó: www.fao.org/docrep/003/X3910E/X3910E06.htm
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| colony hybridization |
A technique that uses a nucleic acid probe to identify a bacterial colony with a vector carrying a specific cloned gene or genes.
Ãâó: www.fao.org/docrep/003/X3910E/X3910E06.htm
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