"Subcloned" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A verb form of "subclone", which refers to the act of creating a second, almost identical copy of a living cell, such as a bacterium or a mammalian cell, by a process similar to cloning.
Subclasses refer to subsets of a class or a group of related items that share common characteristics and belong to a larger family or category. In many programming languages, including object-oriented programming, a subclass is a class that inherits properties and methods from a parent or superclass.<br><br>In a broader sense, subclasses can also refer to specific categories or subgroups within a larger classification system, such as biology, categorizing living beings into different species or genera.<br><br>In real-world contexts, subclasses can be applied to various fields, such as taxonomy, where they help to organize complex data or systems into more manageable and meaningful groups.<br><br>Key characteristics of subclasses include:<br><br>1. Inheritance: Subclasses inherit attributes and behaviors from their parent class or superclass.<br>2. Specificity: Subclasses are more specific than their parent class or superclass, meaning they share some, but not all, characteristics.<br>3. Hierarchy: Subclasses often form a hierarchical relationship with their parent class or superclass, with subclasses branching off from a more general category.<br><br>Examples of subclasses include:<br><br> In programming: Animal (superclass) -> Dog (subclass), Cat (subclass)<br> In biology: Kingdom (class) -> Mammalia (subclass) -> Canis (genus)<br> In categorization: Product (class) -> Smartphone (subclass), Laptop (subclass)
Located below or beneath a condyle, a rounded prominence in the shape of a knuckle, typically the lower jaw.