| reproductive cloning |
The use of somatic cell nuclear transfer or embryo splitting (see cloning) to secure pregnancy and a new individual intended to be virtually genetically identical to the person who donated the cell nucleus used or genetically identical to siblings resulting from embryo splitting (which in effect is the intentional creation of identical twins, or triplets etc.). Practiced in animals, especially farm animals. ...
Ãâó: www.jansen.com.au/Dictionary_PR.html
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| repetition compulsion |
In psychoanalytic theory, the impulse to reenact earlier emotional experiences. Considered by Freud to be more fundamental than the pleasure principle. Defined by Jones in the following way: "The blind impulse to repeat earlier experiences and situations quite irrespective of any advantage that doing so might bring from a pleasure-pain point of view."
Ãâó: www.indianpsychiatry.com/Glossary.htm
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| replication fork |
A locally unwound portion of DNA where replication occurs. 317
Ãâó: www.mhhe.com/biosci/genbio/life/glossaryr.mhtml
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| reporting |
can be directed to external stakeholders and regulators, to internal audiences, and serve in management improvement. While the reporting process will vary depending on the target audience, a main goal is to move towards closer alignment of values between external and internal stakeholders and decision-makers. This engagement is most appropriate during the stages of identifying core issues to address and at the assessment stage to ensure that the results are credible and transparent. ...
Ãâó: www.deh.gov.au/settlements/industry/finance/public...
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| reptile |
cold-blooded animal that has a backbone
Ãâó: www.msnucleus.org/membership/html/k-6/rc/dictionar...
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| rep | something (especially a game) that is played again |
|---|---|
| rep | play again |
| rep | repeat a game against the same opponent |
| rep | play again, as of a melody |
| rep | reproduce a recording on a recorder |
| rep | fill something that had previously been emptied |
| rep | filling again by supplying what has been used up |
| rep | fill to satisfaction |
| rep | (informal) having consumed enough food or drink |
| rep | eating until excessively full |
| rep | the state of being satisfactorily full and unable to take on more |
| rep | copy that is not the original |
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