| dominance |
the strength of physical expression of one allele, or variant, of a gene over another. In human genetic inheritance, every gene pair contains a gene from each parent. For example, if a child of a blue-eyed and a brown-eyed parent inherits one gene for each eye colour, he or she will be brown-eyed, because of the dominance of the brown-eyed gene.
Ãâó: www.qimr.edu.au/qimr_glossary.html
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|---|---|
| dominance |
An intralocus interaction in which the average value of the heterozygote is not exactly intermediate between the average values of the two homozygotes.
Ãâó: www.fgcouncil.bc.ca/doc-glos.html
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| domain |
For DNS, a group of workstations and servers that share a single group name.
Ãâó: www.wrightcolorgraphics.com/d.htm
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| DOM |
A system in which a structured document, for example an XML file, is viewed as a tree of objects that can be programmatically accessed and updated.
Ãâó: publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/adiehelp/topic/c...
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| dominance |
to be higher ranked (as in the bull is dominant over the cow) or to be more common (as in grasses are the dominant species)
Ãâó: www.sensesofwildness.com/africa/GLOSSARY.HTM
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