gene

(Englisch)

  1. A theoretical unit of heredity of living organisms which may take several values and (in principle) predetermines a precise trait of an organism's form (phenotype), such as hair color.
  2. A segment of DNA or RNA from a cell's or an organism's genome, that may take several forms and thus parameterizes a phenomenon, such as (often) the structure of a protein.

Frequenz

B2
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/d͡ʒiːn/
Etymologie (Englisch)

From German Gen, from Ancient Greek γενεά (geneá, “generation, descent”), from the aorist infinitive of γίγνομαι (gígnomai, “I come into being”). Coined by Danish botanist Wilhelm Ludwig Johannsen in 1909, in a German-language publication, from the last syllable of pangene.

Related words

Erbfaktor

Schiffsseite

gen

γονίδιο

مورثة

γόνος

guen

gèn

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