the omission that is made when an editorial change shortens a written passage; "an editor's deletions frequently upset young authors"; "both parties agreed on the excision of the proposed clause"
The process of excluding portions of experience of the world from one's internal representations, and one's speech
A type of mutation caused by loss of one or more nucleotides from a DNA segment Deletions can be very large, encompassing many genes and megabases of DNA, to the point of producing a visible cytological abnormality in a chromosome Small deletions within a gene can alter the reading frame, and thus the amino acid sequence of the encoded protein See the Figure at NHGRI
In the process of DNA replication, a deletion occurs if a nucleotide or series of nucleotides is not copied Such deletions may be harmless, may result in disease, or may in rare cases be beneficial Source : PhRMA Genomics
Deletion means erasing text without copying it into the kill ring (q v ) The alternative is killing (q v ) See Deletion
the act of deleting something written or printed the omission that is made when an editorial change shortens a written passage; "an editor's deletions frequently upset young authors"; "both parties agreed on the excision of the proposed clause
Elimination of a gene (i e , from a chromosome) either in nature or in the laboratory See also Gene
A loss of part of the DNA from a chromosome; can lead to a disease or abnormality See also: chromosome, mutation
The process of preventing a message from being delivered to the intended recipient as a method of perpetrating a fraud [x919]
A chromosomal mutation resulting in the loss of a segment of the genetic material and the genetic information contained therein from a chromosome