¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Phenotypes
1. phenotype [n] - See also: phenotype
Lexicographical Neighbors of Phenotypes
Literary usage of Phenotypes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Genetics; an Introduction to the Study of Heredity by Herbert Eugene Walter (1922)
"These fall into four phenotypes, nine black (BEY), three black-eyed yellow (BeY),
... E. RABBIT phenotypes Perhaps no better application of the factor ..."
2. Microbial and Phenotypic Definition of Rats and Mice: Proceedings of the by National Research Council Staff, ebrary, Inc, National Research Council, International Committee, Commission on Life Sciences, National Academy of Sciences (1999)
"... Genetic Background and phenotypes in Animal Models of Human Diseases Kazuo
Moriwaki Vice President, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies ..."
3. Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (1903)
"STABLE ENZYME phenotypes IN TUMOR LINES terminology: homozygotes are 1, 2, A, B,
or C, where the same allele occurs at the same locus on homologous ..."
4. Transposable Elements in Plants: Sponsored CRIS/ICAR Projects and Bibliography by Andrew Kalinski (1995)
"The two sectoring phenotypes cosegregated with different single, non-rearranged
Acs, and loss of these Acs from the genome corresponded to the loss of ..."
5. Ending the War Metaphor: The Changing Agenda for Unraveling the Host-Microbe by Forum on Microbial Threats, Institute of Medicine (U.S.) (2006)
"... resistance susceptibility resistance at cellular level " i cells die to prevent
pathogen spread FIGURE 2-4 phenotypes of bacterial disease resistance. ..."
6. Statistical Inference from Genetic Data on Pedigrees by Elizabeth A. Thompson (2000)
"Chapter Genes, Pedigrees and Genetic Models DNA, alleles, loci, genotypes, and
phenotypes The DNA in the nuclei of cells of an individual consists of about ..."
7. Law and Justice Statistics, Proceedings of the Third Workshop by George G. Woodworth (1985)
"Data are given concerning six phenotypes observed in a bloodstain and in a missing
person's parents; they are displayed in Table 2. TABLE 2. ..."