Replication

Word REPLICATION
Character 11
Hyphenation rep li ca tion
Pronunciations /ɹɛplɪˈkeɪʃən/

Definitions and meanings of "Replication"

What do we mean by replication?

The act or process of replicating something. noun

The process by which genetic material, a single-celled organism, or a virus reproduces or makes a copy of itself. noun

In scientific research, the repetition of an experiment to confirm findings or to ensure accuracy. noun

A copy or reproduction. noun

The plaintiff's response to the defendant's answer or plea; a reply. noun

An answer; a reply. noun

In law, the third step in the pleadings in a common-law action or bill in equity, being the reply of the plaintiff or complainant to the defendant's plea or answer. noun

Return or repercussion of sound. noun

In logic, the assuming or using of the same term twice in the same proposition. noun

Repetition; hence, a copy; a portrait. noun

A repeated folding or bending back of a surface. noun

In music, the repetition of a tone at a higher or lower octave, or a combination of replicates together. noun

An answer; a reply. noun

The reply of the plaintiff, in matters of fact, to the defendant's plea. noun

Return or repercussion, as of sound; echo. noun

A repetition; a copy. noun

The copying, by enzymes, of a cell's genome, i.e. the DNA or RNA comprising its genetic material, so as to form an identical genome. This is an essential step in the division of one cell into two. This differs from transcription, which is the copying of only part of the genetic information of a cell's genome into RNA, as in the processes of biosynthesis of messenger RNA or ribosomal RNA. noun

Process by which an object, person, place or idea may be copied mimicked or reproduced. noun

Copy; reproduction. noun

The process by which an object, person, place or idea may be copied mimicked or reproduced.

Copy; reproduction.

A response from the plaintiff to the defendant's plea.

The process of producing replicas of DNA or RNA molecules.

The process of frequent electronic data copying a one database in one computer or server to a database in another so that all users share the same level of information. Used to improve fault tolerance of the system.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Replication

The word "replication" in example sentences

You have failed to show that biological replication is an undirected chemical process. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Due to the stochasticity in replication and compartment fission the best compartment types recur. ❋ Unknown (2009)

And if you want to say the replication is undirected then you have to show the origin was also undirected. ❋ Unknown (2010)

ID guy: And if you want to say the replication is undirected then you have to show the origin was also undirected. ❋ Unknown (2010)

As biological replication is a chemical process, and as we can show that replicators can produce large amounts of functionally specified information, that contradicts one of the two pillars of his argument. ❋ Unknown (2010)

The engineer would need to have comprehensive knowledge of the available material resources (amino acids, proteins, molecules involved in replication, etc.), the risks and benefits of various self-replication means, the potential environment (s) the first cell is to be placed in, and probably more than what's coming to mind right now. ❋ Unknown (2009)

ID guy: You have failed to show that biological replication is an undirected chemical process. ❋ Unknown (2010)

For all other problems, the basis of biological evolution, genome replication, is in place but, in the case of OORT, the emergence of this mechanism itself is the explanandum. ❋ Unknown (2007)

RNA replication is still very primitive and contrived. ❋ Unknown (2007)

But once consistent replication is established then access to resources, fecundity, fidelity and mortality define evolutionary success. ❋ Unknown (2007)

And as replication is necessarily imperfect, we can simplify that to just replicators. ❋ Unknown (2007)

In addition to the efficiency gains associated with caching, this technique also addresses the risk of short-term replication lag between master and slave databases since data written during the lag time will likely be present in the cache. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Supposing that replication is preserved, you then still have a replicating molecule. ❋ Unknown (2007)

Prebiotic replication is chemically more limited than reproduction based on the genetic code and decoding+construction mechanisms. ❋ Unknown (2007)

I've pointed out that Before Language (B.L.) replication is constrained to physically copying according an accessible template. ❋ Unknown (2007)

In any case, replication is inherently inadequate. ❋ Unknown (2007)

Real genomes (DNA) require a code by which their replication is enabled. ❋ Unknown (2007)

Cross Reference for Replication

  • Replication cross reference not found!

What does replication mean?

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