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homologas

Homologas is not a standard term in English scientific vocabulary. It is sometimes encountered as a plural form in romance-language texts or as a misspelling of homologues or homologs. Because of this ambiguity, a precise definition depends on context, and readers are usually directed to the related terms homologue, homologous, or homologs.

In biology, a homolog, or homologue, is a gene, chromosome, or structure that shares ancestry with a

In chemistry, homologs are members of a homologous series—compounds that differ from each other by a repeating

In linguistics and related fields, homologous or homologies refer to features that are similar due to shared

Because there is no single widely recognized definition for “homologas” in English, it is often best treated

counterpart
in
another
organism
or
within
the
same
genome.
Homologous
chromosomes
are
matched
pair
chromosomes
that
carry
the
same
genes
at
corresponding
loci
and
pair
during
meiosis.
In
comparative
genomics,
orthologs
are
genes
in
different
species
descended
from
a
common
ancestral
gene,
while
paralogs
are
genes
related
by
duplication
within
a
genome.
Homology
describes
the
overall
relationship
of
similarity
arising
from
common
ancestry.
unit,
typically
a
methylene
group
(-CH2-).
This
concept
helps
classify
families
of
compounds
such
as
alkanes,
alcohols,
or
carboxylic
acids
based
on
incremental
structural
differences.
ancestry
or
parallel
development,
rather
than
independent
invention.
as
a
likely
misspelling
or
language-specific
plural
form.
For
precise
usage,
it
is
advisable
to
refer
to
the
standard
terms
homologs,
homologues,
or
homologous,
depending
on
the
disciplinary
context.