Supplementary genes are two independent pairs of genes interacting in such a manner that one dominant factor produces its effect whether the other is present or not, while the second gene can produce its effect only in the presence of the first.
No - the father's genes are not always the dominant genes.
Anions have supplementary electrons.
supplementary
Chromosomes contain genes which are segments of DNA.
the chromosomes carry the genes
supplementary duty
The answer is supplementary! :-)
No, they are generally not supplementary.
No, the concept of supplementary does not apply to polygons.
They are supplementary
No. The adjacent angles are supplementary.
It is 120-degree angle are supplementary.
A supplementary angle is 180 degrees. So, it depends how many supplementary angles you add together.
In geometry, supplementary angles add to 180 degrees. The term 'supplementary number' is not used in algebra.
No. All linear pair angles are supplementary, but supplementary angles do not have to be a linear pair.
It is complementary to one angle, supplementary to another.
88 and 92 are supplementary angles