Motion is a fundamental property of the universe, nothing is at absolute rest.
A dominant trait is part of genetics in which a trait will appear in an offspring if one parent contributes it. For example, if one parent contributes the dominant trait of dark hair and the other contributes the recessive trait of light hair, the offspring would have dark hair.
The trait that is hidden is recessive trait.
A new trait a derived trait
a trait controlled by many genes
If the white trait is dominant, then yes. If the white trait is recessive, then no.
dominat
Albinism is a recessive trait which will result in a lack of pigmentation in the skin eyes and hair. It occurs about 1 in every 17,000 people in the U.S.
A dominant trait is part of genetics in which a trait will appear in an offspring if one parent contributes it. For example, if one parent contributes the dominant trait of dark hair and the other contributes the recessive trait of light hair, the offspring would have dark hair.
Buddhist.
Dimples are typically considered a dominant trait. This means that if one parent has dimples and the other does not, there is a higher likelihood that their offspring will inherit dimples. However, the expression of this trait can be influenced by multiple genes and environmental factors, making the inheritance pattern more complex than simple dominance might suggest.
When a recessive and dominant gene mix, the dominant gene will typically determine the trait expressed in the offspring. This is known as dominant inheritance, where the dominant gene masks the presence of the recessive gene in determining the phenotype.
an organization that is controlled by a dominat person or group.
dominat
it means a diffrent type of things
yes as are brown eyes
Christianity.
A dominant allele is called dominant because it can express its trait in the phenotype even when only one copy is present, overshadowing the effect of a recessive allele. This means that if an individual has at least one dominant allele for a particular gene, the dominant trait will be observed. The term reflects the allele's ability to "dominate" the phenotype in genetic expression.