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The gene that expresses itself over the other is Dominant. The former gene is recessive.
This is called codominance in this case, neither allele is dominant over another, it creates in heterozyogous individuals a phenotype that is not in intermediate, nor the phenotype either of the two alleles create, but rather, a different phenotype.
It should be a dominant allele--a dominant allele's trait will be expressed over the recessive allele's trait.
incomplete dominance
emphasis
Incomplete dominance or co-dominant
This is called codominance.
The gene that expresses itself over the other is Dominant. The former gene is recessive.
This is called codominance in this case, neither allele is dominant over another, it creates in heterozyogous individuals a phenotype that is not in intermediate, nor the phenotype either of the two alleles create, but rather, a different phenotype.
Dominant trait is a genetics term. A dominant trait is one which will be expressed if one of the parents has the gene for that trait. A recessive trait is one that will be expressed only if both parents carry the trait.
This is called codominance in this case, neither allele is dominant over another, it creates in heterozyogous individuals a phenotype that is not in intermediate, nor the phenotype either of the two alleles create, but rather, a different phenotype.
If your sister is younger, it might be for attention. If she's older, it might be to show that she's the dominant sibling.
When one trait is not completely dominate over another, this is called incomplete dominance. What will be seen (phenotype) will be a blending of the two.
It should be a dominant allele--a dominant allele's trait will be expressed over the recessive allele's trait.
when one allele is completely dominant over another allele, then it masks the expression of the second allele so the allele that masks the effect is called dominant allele and the allele whos effect is masked is called recessive allele
This is called codominance in this case, neither allele is dominant over another, it creates in heterozyogous individuals a phenotype that is not in intermediate, nor the phenotype either of the two alleles create, but rather, a different phenotype.
No. The dominant estate is the property that owns the right to use an easement over another person's land (the servient estate). The dominant estate has no right to shift the location of the easement. That can only be done with the consent of the owner of the servient estate, in writing and recorded in the land record.No. The dominant estate is the property that owns the right to use an easement over another person's land (the servient estate). The dominant estate has no right to shift the location of the easement. That can only be done with the consent of the owner of the servient estate, in writing and recorded in the land record.No. The dominant estate is the property that owns the right to use an easement over another person's land (the servient estate). The dominant estate has no right to shift the location of the easement. That can only be done with the consent of the owner of the servient estate, in writing and recorded in the land record.No. The dominant estate is the property that owns the right to use an easement over another person's land (the servient estate). The dominant estate has no right to shift the location of the easement. That can only be done with the consent of the owner of the servient estate, in writing and recorded in the land record.