yes it is
No, elements in the same column are in the same family.
Calaverite is in the sulfides class and its subclass is tellurides.
An albuminoid is a simple protein of a subclass derived from animal connective or supportive tissue.
Such atoms belong to a group in the periodic table of elements.
Yes, elements within the same family have similar chemical properties due to their shared number of valence electrons. This results in similar reactivity and chemical behavior among elements in the same family.
The bilby is an omnivorous marsupial, of the same family as the bandicoot. Phylum: Chordata Class:Mammalia Subclass: Marsupialia Order:Peramelemorphia Family: PeramelidaeGenus: Macrotis
False. A method with the same signature in both the superclass and its subclass is known as method overriding, and is a valid concept in Java.
No; you may decide to change the behaviour of a method in the subclass, or to add additional functionality.
The subclass has the same signature name ,numbers,type of arguments as a same method in the superclass.
A class can be a subclass of another class, not of itself.A class can be a subclass of another class, not of itself.A class can be a subclass of another class, not of itself.A class can be a subclass of another class, not of itself.
Specialization Hierarchy - has the constraint that every subclass participates asa subclass in only one class/subclass relationship, i.e. that each subclass hasonly one parent. This results in a tree structure.Specialization Lattice - has the constraint that a subclass can be a subclass of morethan one class/subclass relationship.
Prototheria are in the phylum subclass chordata.
Kangaroos are mammals from the subclass marsupial from the family Macropodidae (macropods, meaning 'large foot').
Rosidae is a subclass of the class Magnoliatae. They are a group of trees and herbs and shrubs, mostly with flowers that are polypetalous.
They are members of the subclass Actinopterygii, which includes ray-finned fishes.
If by biological you mean the phylogeny it's phylum mollusca, class bivalvia, subclass heterodonta
The koala is in the subclass 'Marsupialia', which belongs to the class Mammalia. It is a marsupial and a mammal.