Cloning (producing a clone) refers to creating a copy of a living organism. Some plants do this naturally, growing copies of themselves with the same genetic makeup. But for animals and humans, it would require growing a new individual from only a single parent.
Cloning has become used metaphorically for copying programs or operating parameters from one electronic device to another. This is sometimes illegally done to "piggyback" existing phone or data connections, often to record, intercept or steal information.
theoretically, cloning is the same.
Genetically identical.
therapeutic cloning
Embryo cloning is when you go through the process of cloning an original embryo
there are two types of vectors cloning vector and expression vectors.
theoretically, cloning is the same.
none
No, they have two different meanings
A sentence that can be read with two different meanings is called ambiguous. It can be interpreted in more than one way depending on how the words are understood.
A homograph has the same spelling with different meanings, maybe different sound. A homonym has the same sound and may have the same spelling, with different meanings.
The sleuth dog fight sight
It's called a homophone. Homophones are words that are pronounced the same but have different meanings and often different spellings. Examples include "there" and "their," "to" and "too," and "write" and "right."
The word "party" can refer to both a social gathering and a person's legal entourage. For example, "The party at the club was enjoyable, but the defendant's legal party struggled to prove their case in court."
The term for two words that look the same but have different meanings and pronunciations is "heteronym."
When a word like "bass" has two different meanings and pronunciations, it is known as a homograph. Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings.
No it isn't; the two words have entirely different meanings.
A word that is spelled the same with two different meanings is called a homonym.