Examples of using Haploid in English and their translations into Malay
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Sex cells are haploid.
Four haploid daughter cells are obtained.
Daughter cells are haploid(n).
Haploid number for humans is 23 chromosomes.
Each of the four cells is haploid.
If the parent cell is haploid(N),then the daughter cells will be haploid.
The cells have become haploid(N).
So this is haploid, this is diploid number, and this is for humans, right?
The daughter cells are haploid(n).
If the diploid number is 2N, then the haploid number is going to be half of that, or just N.
The cells of the gametophyte are haploid(n).
The two haploid cells go through a cell division and get together four haploid cells.
After meiosis 2 form 4 haploid cells.
If a haploid set consists of two sets, it must be of a tetraploid(four sets) species.[1].
The end product is you have four cells and each of them are haploid.
It's very easy to memorize, because haploid starts with the same two letters as half.
So when people talk about half the number of chromosomees, they say it has a haploid number.
For diploid organisms, the monoploid number and haploid number are equal; in humans, both are equal to 23.
Each of two parent organisms contributeshalf of the offspring's genetic makeup by creating haploid gametes.
You say, oh, if you say this is a haploid number, what do you call it when you have the full complement of chromosomes?
In meiosis, one diploid parent cell divides to yield four haploid daughter cells.
Under normal conditions, the haploid number is exactly half the total number of chromosomes present in the organism's somatic cells.
When a human germ cell undergoes meiosis,the diploid 46-chromosome complement is split in half to form haploid gametes.
And we end up with four haploid cells because they have half the contingency of chromosomes, and these are called gametes.
The majority of known fungi belong to the Phylum Ascomycota, which is characterized by the formation of an ascus(plural, asci),a sac-like structure that contains haploid ascospores.
A gametophyte is the haploid, multicellular phase of plants and algae that undergo alternation of generations, with each of its cells containing only a single set of chromosomes….
So after it's fertilized, you remember from the meiosis videos that each of these were haploid, or that they had-- oh, I added an extra i there-- that they had half the contingency of the DNA. haploid.
A haploid set that consists of a single complete set of chromosomes(equal to the monoploid set), as shown in the picture above, must belong to a diploid species.
And so if this germ cell undergoes meiosis, and I will do a whole video on the mechanics of it, instead of two cells, it will actually produce four cells that each have half the number of chromosomes in them,so these cells are haploid.
First, it is a portmanteau word for haploid genotype, which is a collection of specific alleles(that is, specific DNA sequences) in a cluster of tightly-linked genes on a chromosome that are likely to be inherited together- that is, they are likely to be conserved as a sequence that survives the descent of many generations of reproduction.[5][6].
