The meaning of TT reimbursement is telegraphic transfer reimbursement. Often this term will be followed by the world allowed, or not allowed. This alerts you to weather a telegraphic transfer reimbursement is allowed or not.
When two alleles differ from each other, such as Tt, it is called heterozygous, hetero meaning different. When alleles are the same (TT) it is called homozygous, homo meaning same.
Tt, tt -- novanet :)
The possible offspring outcomes of this cross would be 50% Tt (heterozygous) and 50% tt (homozygous recessive).
TT Tt tt
rather TT Tt tt
Tt X Tt Statistically, 1 TT Homozygous dominant, expresses T. 2 Tt Heterozygous dominant, expresses T. 1 tt Homozygous recessive, expresses t.
Tt, tt -- novanet :)
The offspring will have a 25% chance of being TT (homozygous dominant), a 50% chance of being Tt (heterozygous), and a 25% chance of being tt (homozygous recessive). This follows Mendel's law of segregation where alleles for a trait separate during gamete formation.
TT, Tt, and tt are genotypes that represent combinations of alleles for a specific gene. In this case, T represents the dominant allele and t represents the recessive allele. TT represents a homozygous dominant genotype, Tt represents a heterozygous genotype, and tt represents a homozygous recessive genotype.
Nope! TT is the dominant phenotype (what ever it may be) and tt is the recessive phenotype (what ever that may be).So say T is the allele for Tall plants, t is the allele for short plants. TT would be show the tall phenotype while tt would show the short phenotype. If the genotype was Tt, the phenotype would be tall as well because the T is dominant and masks the phenotype of t (short plants).
The combination that will complete the Punnett square for this example is Tt. This would be the offspring resulting from a cross between the parent genotypes TT and Tt.