Diploid
In mitosis, the daughter cells each have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
When a cell has two sets of chromosomes, it is said to be diploid, not haploid. Haploid cells have one set of chromosomes. Diploid cells have two sets of chromosomes, one set inherited from each parent.
A cell such as a somatic cell that contains two sets of chromosomes is said to be a diploid.
A cell with pairs of chromosomes is called a diploid cell, while a cell with no pairs of chromosomes is called a haploid cell. Diploid cells have two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent, while haploid cells have only one set of chromosomes.
An organism or cell with two sets of chromosomes is diploid, meaning it has pairs of homologous chromosomes. In humans, each somatic cell typically contains 23 pairs of chromosomes, for a total of 46 chromosomes.
A diploid cell has homologous chromosomes. Diploid cells contain two sets of chromosomes, with one set inherited from each parent. The homologous chromosomes have similar genes in the same order, but may have different versions of those genes.
A cell with pairs of chromosomes is called a diploid cell, while a cell with no pairs of chromosomes is called a haploid cell. Diploid cells have two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent, while haploid cells have only one set of chromosomes.
A diploid cell. In other words, a cell containing 2n chromosomes.
Two X sex chromosomes are in a female liver cell.
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Diploid cell