Being a dominant mom involves setting clear boundaries, being consistent in enforcing rules, and displaying assertiveness when necessary. It's important to balance being authoritative with showing love and support to your children. Communication is key in letting them know what is expected and why certain rules are in place.
One dominant trait my dad has but my mom does not is his ability to fix things around the house. He is very handy and enjoys working with tools, while my mom prefers to hire professionals for home repairs.
A dominant allele is the allele which expresses itself morphologically.for example;the dimple on your cheek.your mom has a dimple whereas your father doesn't have it .but you too possess it.then ,your mother's allele serves to be the dominant allele.
I don't know but I did your mom so hard because she came all over the ceiling
If by "all dominant phenotypes" you mean the parents are homozygous, then no. AA x AA will never yield a gamete with AA But if you're talking about heterozygous chromosomes Aa x Aa, then yes
A genotype with two dominant alleles, such as BB, is referred to as homozygous dominant. In this case, both alleles for a particular gene are the same and dominant, which typically results in the expression of the dominant trait. Individuals with a homozygous dominant genotype will exhibit the dominant phenotype associated with that gene.
Your mom is the dominant hand >:)
It depends on your family and which parent is more submissive. For me, my father is the dominant :):):)
When i have sex with your mom.
One dominant trait my dad has but my mom does not is his ability to fix things around the house. He is very handy and enjoys working with tools, while my mom prefers to hire professionals for home repairs.
A dominant allele is the allele which expresses itself morphologically.for example;the dimple on your cheek.your mom has a dimple whereas your father doesn't have it .but you too possess it.then ,your mother's allele serves to be the dominant allele.
Yes. They both can donate their dominant gene. The genotype has two places, one for the one donated by the mom and one for the dad.
your mom in a way because she is cool like that.
A dominant trait overpowers a recessive trait. If your dad has brown hair and your mom has orange hair, you are more likely to get your dad's brown hair because it is the dominant trait.
50%. There are four possible outcomes of the cross:dominant trait from "dad", dominant trait from "mom"recessive trait from "dad", dominant trait from "mom"dominant trait from "dad", recessive trait from "mom"recessive trait from "dad", recessive trait from "mom"Therefore, to get hybrid offspring (one dominant, one recessive), you have a 2 out of 4 chance.
Since O blood is recessive and B is dominant, this scenario would be possible
This question is worded weird, because if someone had a dominant phenotype, as in Brown eyes dominant, than they would be BB or Bb. The exact genotype would need to have a key to what one of their parents' genotype was. Example: If a man with brown eyes (dominant) had a mom with blue eyes (recessive) then what would the man's genotype be? the answer would be Bb because that means that the man's dad would have BB and mom would be bb and when using punnent square, his genotype is Bb (only possible genotype is Bb)
not necessarily. it's all about genetics. she may, or she may not. you'd need a karyotype to be certain. If the mom is homozygous dominant for large breasts, the daughter will definitely have big breasts. barring a mutation -Akilae