No because T resembles a dominant trait and t resembles a recessive trait. If it is TT, that means there are 2 dominant traits, and for TT there are 2 recessive traits.
What is the genotype and phenotype of the F1 generation
The genotype of a pea plant that shows a recessive phenotype would be homozygous for the recessive allele. Using letter symbols, it would be represented as aa.
No, phenotype refers to the physical traits or characteristics that are observable in an organism, while genotype refers to the genetic makeup of an organism, including both the genes that are expressed and those that are not. So, while genotype influences phenotype, they are not the same thing.
A phenotype is a physical characteristic of an organism, such as a tall pea plant. An organism's genotype is the specific gene combination that makes up a characteristic using Punnett Square. For example, a tall pea plant might have a genotype of TT or Tt, whereas a small pea plant may have a genotype of tt. (Note: In this case "T" is dominant and "t" is recessive.)
A tall looking pea plant can have a genotype of Tt or TT.
Yes because if the phenotype is recessive there is only one possible genotype, little letter little letter ex. rr (wrikled pea plant seed), cc (albino), tt (short pea plant) whereas if you have a dominante phenotype there are two possible genotypes, big letter big letter or big letter little letter ex. RR Rr (round pea plant seed), CC Cc (normal skin pigmentation) TT Tt (Tall Pea plant)
The genotype of the tall pea plant is heterozygous
false
both must be tt or both must be Tt
Not entirely sure what you meant on that one, but I'll try and answer it. Genes have a genotype and a phenotype. (spelling?) A genotype is the "official label for the gene" (i.e. Tt, TT, tt) and phenotype descibes the appearance (i.e. homozygous tall, heterozygous tall, heterozygous short...) Hope this helps!
Tt
For example, if the tall plant stand for T, the genotypes are: TT tt