Home

variantes

Variantes, or variants, is a term used across disciplines to describe alternative forms that derive from a common source and remain recognizably linked to a shared origin. The concept is used to indicate diversity within a category while preserving a recognizable core.

In biology and genetics, a genetic variant is any difference in a DNA sequence among individuals or

In linguistics, language variants refer to alternate forms of words, phrases, or pronunciations that arise from

In taxonomy and botany, variety or var. denotes a rank below species that recognizes distinct, heritable traits

In technology and commerce, variants describe different configurations, editions, or models of a product. Variants may

In medicine and epidemiology, viral or pathogen variants are versions of an organism that carry mutations altering

populations.
Variants
include
single-nucleotide
polymorphisms,
insertions,
deletions,
and
larger
structural
changes.
Most
variants
are
neutral,
but
some
influence
traits
or
disease
risk.
A
common
distinction
is
between
polymorphisms,
variants
present
at
appreciable
frequencies,
and
mutations,
which
are
rarer
changes.
dialect,
sociolect,
or
historical
change.
Variants
can
involve
pronunciation,
spelling,
grammar,
and
usage,
and
they
may
shift
across
regions
or
social
groups
over
time.
within
a
population.
In
horticulture
and
agriculture,
cultivars
are
human-created
variants
selected
for
specific
characteristics
and
propagated
to
maintain
those
traits.
differ
in
features,
hardware
components,
or
software
options
to
target
different
markets
or
user
needs.
properties
such
as
transmissibility,
virulence,
or
immune
escape.
Surveillance
often
uses
lineage
or
clade
names,
while
public
communication
may
use
descriptive
or
familiar
terms.