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repulsionearly 15c., "repudiation," from Late Latin repulsionem (nominative repulsio) "a repelling," noun of action from past participle stem of repellere (see repel). Meaning "action [..]
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repulsionSee trans configuration. © 2005 by W. H. Freeman and Company. All rights reserved. Pierce, B. Genetics: A conceptual approach. 2nd Edition.
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repulsionthe act of repelling or the condition of being repelled an extreme dislike of something, or hostility to something
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repulsion(n) intense aversion(n) the force by which bodies repel one another(n) the act of repulsing or repelling an attack; a successful defensive stand
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repulsionThe force that acts between like bodies of electric or magnetic charges to separate them; pushes away (Lessons 23, 24)
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repulsion The act of driving apart.
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repulsionAn arrangement in which each homologous chromsome carries the wild-type allele of one gene and the mutant allele of the other one.
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repulsionAllelic arrangement of two linked heterozygous loci, in which each homologous chromosome has one mutant (a or b) and one wild-type (A or B) allele (ie. Ab/aB). Two linked heterozygous gene pairs in th [..]
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repulsionThe mechanical force tending to separate bodies having like electrical charges or like magnetic polarity.
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