Meaning clone
What does clone mean? Here you find 109 meanings of the word clone. You can also add a definition of clone yourself

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Literally a fragment, the word in modern medical science has come to mean a replica, for example, of a group of bacteria or a macromolecule such as DNA. Clone also refers to an individual developed from a single somatic (non-germ) cell from a parent, representing an exact replica of that parent. A clone is a group of cells derived from a single anc [..]
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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Genetically identical organisms produced by nucleus substitution or embryo division.
Source: beefusa.org (offline)

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A group of vines originating from a single, individual plant propagated asexually from a single source. Clones are selected for the unique qualities of the grapes and wines they yield, such as flavor, [..]
Source: winespectator.com

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1903, in botany, from Greek klon "a twig, spray," related to klados "sprout, young branch, offshoot of a plant," possibly from PIE root *kel- (1) "to strike, cut" (see ho [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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cell or group of cells that is genetically identical to its ancestor cell or group of cells.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Refers to a replica. DNA molecules can be cloned using bacteria or viruses as hosts. A genetic clone can also refer to an organism that is a genetic copy of the original - produced using various in vi [..]
Source: dnaftb.org

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An identical copy of an organism. Most plants, fungi, algae, and many other organisms naturally reproduce by making clones of themselves as a form of asexual reproduction.
Source: ucmp.berkeley.edu

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(also "copy") a very close duplicate of a brand name club Example: I've seen clones/copies before that I thought were better than the top brand name version that they were copyi [..]
Source: pgaprofessional.com

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A plant that has been propagated asexually and therefore has attributes that are identical in every respect to the parent.
Source: perennialresource.com (offline)

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  An identical reproduction of the parent plant.
Source: beebetter.info (offline)

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A clone is a genetically identical group of plants derived and maintained from one individual by vegetative propagation.
Source: sjmastergardeners.ucanr.edu

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A Clone is a golf club, that copies the look and the characteristics of an more expensive club but the clone has no patents.
Source: thematchplayer.com (offline)

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One of several identical plants obtained from a parent plant by vegetative propagation.
Source: seasonalgardening.co.uk

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A line of plants propagated from a single mother plant, identical to each other and to the parent. Club root
Source: rgardening.com (offline)

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Genetically identical plants derived from a single individual through constant asexual propagation. Adapted from E. A. McRae, Lilies
Source: shieldsgardens.com

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Plants that originate by vegetative propagation from a single plant and are, as a result, genetically identical to one another.
Source: gardensonline.com.au

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A plant group whose members have all been derived from a single individual through constant propagation by vegetative (asexual) means, e.g. by buds, bulbs, grafts, cuttings, or laboratory tissue culture. Visit our selection of cloning and propagation products.
Source: atlantishydroponics.com (offline)

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A plant produced through asexual reproduction including, but not limited to, cuttings, layering and tissue culture.
Source: hydrofarm.com (offline)

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A group of plants, increased vegetatively, from a single bud; a horticultural variety. Vegetatively produced progeny of a single plant.
Source: southerngardening.org

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an umbrella term for generic brand golf clubs.
Source: translationdirectory.com

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the type of golf club made from openly available component parts. Clone heads are manufactured using similar designs, materials and technology as the brand name clubs they often look like. Both clone [..]
Source: golf-club-revue.com

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n. 1. An exact duplicate "Our product is a clone of their product." Implies a legal reimplementation from documentation or by reverse-engineering. Also connotes lower price. 2. A shoddy, spu [..]
Source: hacker-dictionary.com

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A copy of a name-brand club.
Source: 1st-golf-info.com (offline)

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Internet Glossary A computer, software product, or device that functions exactly like another, better-known product. In practice, the term refers to any PC not produced by one of the leading name-brand manufacturers, such as IBM and Compaq.
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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A single organism, or a lineage of individual organisms that have reproduced asexually, by mitotic division. Can occur naturally or by synthetic manipulation of reproductive cells. © Nature Ed [..]
Source: nature.com

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Definition A mutual fund designed to match the performance of an existing successful fund by imitating its strategy. also called clone fund.
Source: investorwords.com

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(kl=on) 1.A group of cells derived from a single parent cell by mitotic cell division; since reproduction is asexual, the descendants of the parent cell are genetically identical. 2. A term used to refer to cells as separate individuals(as in white blood cells) rather than as part of a growing organ. CNS
Source: mhhe.com (offline)

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A computer, software product, or device that functions exactly like another, better-known product. In practice, the term refers to any PC not produced by one of the leading name-brand manufacturers, s [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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An exact copy of a gene, cell, or organism
Source: medindia.net

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Noun. A distinct type of 'gay' image, being stereotypically masculine and epitomized by short hair, bristle moustaches, jeans or leathers. A good example being the 1970s 'gay' icon [..]
Source: peevish.co.uk

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genetically identical organisms produced from a single parent by vegetative reproduction , or by development of ovules without fertilization.
Source: plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au

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The descendants of a plant that has been propagated solely by vegetative means. Many clones are sterile, but even if the plants set seed, the offspring would not be regarded as part of the clone.
Source: gardeninginfozone.com

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Asexually produced descendants of a single cell or organism (all genetically identical).
Source: felpress.co.uk (offline)

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descendants produced asexually from a single plant or animal. They have exactly the same genetic makeup as the parent, unless mutation occurs.
Source: seafriends.org.nz

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A clone is a genetic copy of a parent cell or organism. Cloning is the process of producing a genetically identical offspring or copy. Cloning is a natural process that underlies asexual reproduction that include the binary fission of prokaryotic cells (bacteria and archaea) and mitotic cell division of eukaryotic cells. Mitosis occurs continuously [..]
Source: whatislife.com (offline)

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To "clone" something is to produce copies of it. To clone a piece of DNA, one would insert it into some type of vector (say, a plasmid) and put the resultant construct into a host (usually a bacterium) so that the plasmid and insert replicate with the host. An individual bacterium is isolated and grown and the plasmid containing the " [..]
Source: seqcore.brcf.med.umich.edu (offline)

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The term "clone" can refer either to a bacterium carrying a cloned DNA, or to the cloned DNA itself. If you receive a clone from a collaborator, you should first figure out if they send you DNA or bacteria. If it is DNA, your first job is to introduce it ("transform" it) into bacteria [see "Transformation (with respect to b [..]
Source: seqcore.brcf.med.umich.edu (offline)

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A cell/organism is genetically identical to the cell/organism it is derived from.
Source: synbicite.com (offline)

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One of a group of genetically identical cells or organisms derived from a common ancestor.
Source: xray.bmc.uu.se

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A set of genetically identical individuals. In genetic engineering, a line of microbes that carry a particular sequence from another species.
Source: evolution-textbook.org

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Organisms derived from a single parent and genetically identical to the parent. The term is also used in genetic engineering, meaning the linking of a specific gene or DNA fragment to a replicable DNA [..]
Source: tvmouse.ucdavis.edu

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A group of identical cells derived from a common parent cell.
Source: sigmaaldrich.com (offline)

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(French : clone) A group of cells derived from a single ancestor.
Source: atlasgeneticsoncology.org

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A genetic replica of an organism created without sexual reproduction.
Source: bio.org

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A genetically identical copy of an organism or of a specific piece of DNA for use in research. See also Human clone.
Source: hc-sc.gc.ca

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Group of plants genetically identical in which all are derived from one selected individual by vegetative or in-vitro propagation, without the sexual process.
Source: flytrapcare.com

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In animal cell culture terminology a population of cells derived from a single cell by mitoses. A clone is not necessarily homogeneous and , therefore, the terms clone and cloned do not indicate homog [..]
Source: worthington-biochem.com

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A bot programmed to connect lots of times (sometimes several hundred connections all at once) can slow down the network or even break it. Cloning is not normally allowed on an IRC network that has any [..]
Source: valinor.sorcery.net

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It can sometimes be faster to make a copy of an existing object than to create a new one and initialise it. The method to do this is called clone(). If you want to make objects of your class publicly [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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A term which is applied to genes, cells, or entire organisms which are derived from - and are genetically identical to - a single common ancestor gene, cell, or organism, respectively. Cloning of gene [..]
Source: cot.food.gov.uk

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(n) a person who is almost identical to another(n) a group of genetically identical cells or organisms derived from a single cell or individual by some kind of asexual reproduction(n) an unauthorized [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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a copycat product that tries to be compatible with the original product. The vast majority of today's PCs are cloned descendants of the original IBM PC of 1981. Clones are usually the result of r [..]
Source: halfhill.com

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A knock-off of an ecig. Generally clones only exist for the more expensive ecigs.
Source: vapex.co (offline)

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A population of identical cells or DNA molecules descended from a single progenitor. Also viruses or organisms that are genetically identical and descended from a single progenitor.
Source: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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This is when your card has been copied at a cash machine or pay counter. Make sure you never let your cards out of your sight, especially in bars, restaurants and petrol stations.
Source: co-operativebank.co.uk (offline)

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Identical series of plants arising from a single parent by artificial or natural vegetative propagation.
Source: forestry.gov.uk (offline)

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Genetically identical, asexually derived offspring of a plant or animal.
Source: phlorum.com (offline)

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an exact copy of a DNA segment; produced by recombinant DNA technology.
Source: lpi.oregonstate.edu

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a group of physiologically independent but genetically identical individuals, or a member of such a group.
Source: cpp.edu (offline)

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A group of genetically identical Cells all descended from a single common ancestral Cell by Mitosis in Eukaryotes or by binary fission in prokaryotes. Clone Cells also include Populations of Recombina [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A copy of a FileMaker Pro file that contains all the field definitions, tables, layouts, scripts, and page setup options, but none of the data.
Source: filemaker.com

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A clone is an object that is the exact duplicate or replica of another object with the same characteristics and properties. It also refers to something that is made to closely resemble an original obj [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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An identical copy of a DNA sequence or entire gene; one or more cells derived from and identical to a single ancestor cell OR to isolate a gene or specific sequence of DNA.
Source: dana-farber.org (offline)

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1. A genetic replica of an organism created without sexual reproduction. 2. A group of genes, cells or organisms derived from a common ancestor. Each clone is genetically identical.
Source: aboutbioscience.org (offline)

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to create an identical genetic copy from a single original cell
Source: vhcprojectimmunereadiness.com (offline)

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The identical genetic copy of an organism or cell produced asexually.
Source: cellsalive.com

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genetically identical replica codon
Source: globalcommunity.org

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To make an exact copy of something. 
Source: ehrweb.aaas.org

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A group of genes, cells or organisms derived from a common ancestor. Each clone is genetically identical.
Source: archive.industry.gov.au (offline)

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A clone is a copy of a gene or a group of genetically identical cells or organisms derived from a single cell or individual. As a verb, cloning refers to the process of making an identical copy of a g [..]
Source: maizecdna.org

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An isolate or group of isolates descending from a common precursor strain by nonsexual reproduction exhibiting phenotypic and/or genotypic traits characterised by a strain-typing method to belong to t [..]
Source: waterpathogens.org

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A cell or collection of cells containing identical genetic material. Clones are produced from a single parent cell.
Source: ncbiotech.org

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(Noun) A genetically identical copy of a living organism. (Verb) To make a genetically identical copy of a living organism, cell or sequence of DNA or to introduce a sequence of DNA into a vector.
Source: biotechlearn.org.nz (offline)

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A group of genetically identical organisms. Cloning occurs naturally in some instances, for example when a new plant is formed from a cutting or when humans produce identical twins. Usually however, n [..]
Source: agriculture.vic.gov.au

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Create a copy of files living on a remote server for your local use. This creates a working copy of the project. You may (or may not) have rights to make changes and push them back up. It is common to clone project hosted on services like GitHub so you can use the code or study it. You can update your local copy at any time to keep up with changes [..]
Source: co-pylit.org (offline)

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a function that makes a copy of an object; usually a clone function relies on run-time information (e.g. a virtual function call) to correctly copy an object given only a pointer or reference to a s [..]
Source: stroustrup.com

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A character that is a clone of a popular fictional character. In D&D clones of Drizzt Do'Urden are endemic, recently Traveller began to suffer an invasion of Malcolm Reynolds clones.
Source: rpggeek.com

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A clone is a snapshot of your production ServiceNow instance that you use to refresh your test or development environments.
Source: wiki.servicenow.com

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A PC who is a carbon copy of that player‘s previous character. Blatant clones are the exact same PC with only the name changed (“I’m playing Frodo’s brother, Grodo”); most simply share the majority of [..]
Source: gnomestew.com

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(1) A group of genetically identical cells or individuals derived by asexual division from a common ancestor. (2) (colloquial), An individual formed by some asexual process so that it is genetically i [..]
Source: groups.molbiosci.northwestern.edu

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A group of genetically identical cells or organisms derived form a single common cell.
Source: ukhairdressers.com (offline)

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A plant group whose members have all been derived from a single individual through constant propagation by vegetative (asexual) means, e.g. by buds, bulbs, grafts, cuttings, or laboratory tissue cultu [..]
Source: growershouse.com

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An individual or group of individuals reproduced asexually from a single organism, and therefore genetically identical to the parent.
Source: abtreegene.com

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To propagate a plant asexually usually by grafting, rooting cuttings, tissue culture, or apomictic seed. Except for an extremely low level of mutation, all plants from a clone are genetically identical. (This is the usage most common in agronomy, horticulture and forestry.) (See ortet and ramet.) To regenerate a whole plant from a single cell.(This [..]
Source: esf.edu (offline)

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A lineage of individuals reproduced asexually, by mitotic division.
Source: sites.sinauer.com (offline)

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Group of organisms that have arisen from a single female by asexual reproduction and are therefore genetically identical. A clone is often called an iso-female line.
Source: evolution.unibas.ch

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A copy of a branded e-cigarette. Many of the top brands now feature authenticity stickers.
Source: ecigarettedirect.co.uk

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1. A segment of DNA contained within a cloning vector. 2. An organism derived from a founding individual by asexual means that is genetically identical to the founding individual.
Source: emice.nci.nih.gov (offline)

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A group of genetically identical cells or organisms derived form a single common cell.
Source: intmedtourism.com

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One or a group of genetically identical cells, organisms, or plants derived by vegetative reproduction from a single parent.
Source: custodiol.com

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An identical copy of an individual organism, a cell, or a gene, or the totality of all the identical copies made from an individual organism, a cell, or a gene. In genetics, the clone implies identica [..]
Source: iatp.org

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Clones are segments of code that are similar according to some definition of similarity. (Ira Baxter, 2002)
Source: informatique.umons.ac.be

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A strain of genetically identical cells descended in culture or in vivo from a single cell.
Source: celltherapysociety.org (offline)

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One of more of a group of genetically identical cells derived by reproduction from a single parent.
Source: iwmf.com (offline)

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Clone or Clones or The Clone may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In computing, a clone is a hardware or software system that is designed to function in the same way as another system. A specific subset of clones are remakes (or remades), which are revivals of old, [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Clone is the first studio album from Leo Kottke and Mike Gordon. It was released on October 8, 2002, and features the duo performing acoustic originals and cover songs on a variety of instruments.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In computing, a clone is a hardware or software system that is designed to function in the same way as another system. A specific subset of clones are remakes (or remades), which are revivals of old, [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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The process of immunological B-cell maturation involves transformation from an undifferentiated B cell to one that secretes antibodies with particular specificity. This differentiation and activation [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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clone() is a method in the Java programming language for object duplication. In Java, objects are manipulated through reference variables, and there is no operator for copying an object—the assignment [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Clone is the fourth studio album by British progressive metal band Threshold, released in 1998. This album is the first to feature longtime singer Andrew "Mac" McDermott and the final album to feature [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In universal algebra, a clone is a set C of finitary operations on a set A such that C contains all the projections πkn: An → A, defined by πkn(x1, …,xn) = xk, C is closed under (finitary multiple) c [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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A clone is a group of identical cells that share a common ancestry, meaning they are derived from the same cell.Clonality implies the state of a cell or a substance being derived from one source or th [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Clone is a 2008 BBC Three comedy series starring Jonathan Pryce and Mark Gatiss, centred on the creation and education of the world's first human clone. Its first series of six 30-minute episodes prem [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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(1) A group of genetically similar plants that have originated by vegetative asexual reproduction from a single parent. (2) Replication of an individual who is genetically identical to its parent.
Source: physicalgeography.net

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[Gk. klon, twig] (1) A lineage of genetically identical individuals or cells. (2) In popular usage, a single individual organism that is genetically identical to another individual. (3) As a verb, to [..]
Source: phschool.com

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(noun) Cell, group of cells, or organisms that descend from a single cell or organism; clones are genetically identical (verb) To replicate or produce identical copies
Source: labtestsonline.org (offline)

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1959, from clone (n.). Related: Cloned; cloning. Extension to genetic duplication of animals and human beings is from 1970.
Source: etymonline.com

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Clone is the term used for any physical piece of DNA that has been localized to a particular region of a chromosome. A prime clone is any piece of DNA that is available from the ATCC; these are mostly the Olson-Riles set of cosmid and lambda clones, as well as many of the cosmid and lambda clones sequenced by the systematic sequencing groups.
Source: yeastgenome.org (offline)





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