| dominant |
The fifth note of the major or minor scale and the chord that is built upon that note. The relationship between dominant and tonic harmonies is fundamental to tonal music.
Ãâó: www.laco.org/glossaryPage.html
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| dominant |
A trait expressed in a heterozygote .
Ãâó: www.bwhct.nhs.uk/clinicalgenetics/glossary.htm
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| dominant |
vs. recessive: if an individual carries two alleles with different phenotypes (eg, yellow peas versus green peas) he can not express both of them-they are mutually exclusive Most of the time one is expressed to the exlusion of the other; the one whose phenotype is expressed is dominant (eg, when a yellow and green allele are present the peas appear yellow-yellow is dominant). The allele whose phenotype is not expressed is recessive (green is recessive)
Ãâó: mywebpages.comcast.net/biologycentury/pages/patter...
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| dominant |
The property of an allele whereby possessing either one or two copies of the allele results in the same phenotype. Contrast with recessive.
Ãâó: www.genaissance.com/pharmacogenomics/glossary.asp
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| dominant |
A version of a gene that produces an effect (phenotype) even when it occurs as only one of the two copies present in a cell. A dominant human gene will exert its effect in half of the progeny of a carrier.
Ãâó: www.cgm.northwestern.edu/glossary.htm
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