Anonymous ID: 4d20db Nov. 29, 2023, 12:04 p.m. No.19998416   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8424 >>8621 >>8684 >>8963 >>9007

>>19998260

 

Trump Explains It SLOWLY for Media/DeSantis Fans: Obama Runs WH, Not Biden.

 

Donald Trump has taken to his Truth Social platform to slowly and clearly explain his penchant for substituting “Obama” for “Biden” during campaign speeches – after corporate media outlets and masses of online Ron DeSantis supporters accused the 45th President of having dementia as a result.

 

“Whenever I sarcastically insert the name Obama for Biden as an indication that others may actually be having a very big influence in running our Country, Ron DeSanctimonious and his failing campaign apparatus, together with the Democrat’s Radical Left ‘Disinformation Machine,’ go wild saying that ‘Trump doesn’t know the name of our President, (CROOKED!) Joe Biden. He must be cognitively impaired,'” Trump posted early on Monday: “No, I know both names very well, never mix them up, and know that they are destroying our Country.”

 

https://thenationalpulse.com/2023/11/27/trump-explains-it-slowly-for-media-desantis-fans-obama-runs-wh-not-biden/

Anonymous ID: 4d20db Nov. 29, 2023, 1 p.m. No.19998645   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8667 >>8721

>>19998513

>>19998550

 

>>19998614

 

just the tip

 

 

circumcise | ˈsərkəmˌsīz |

verb [with object]

1 cut off the foreskin of (a young boy or man, especially a baby) as a religious rite, especially in Judaism and Islam, or as a medical treatment: deciding whether or not to circumcise your baby boy is a personal decision.

2 (as a practice traditional in some cultures) partially or totally remove the external genitalia of (a girl or young woman) for nonmedical reasons: the training focused on the dangers of circumcising girls and women.

DERIVATIVES

circumciser noun

ORIGIN

Middle English: from Old French circonciser, or from Latin circumcis- ‘cut around’, from the verb circumcidere, from circum ‘around, about’ + caedere ‘to cut’.

Anonymous ID: 4d20db Nov. 29, 2023, 1:18 p.m. No.19998721   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8829

>>19998645

 

oh, schiff!

 

was it a favor?

 

>>19998667

 

>>19998645

>>19998614

snp, snp

 

 

 

Single-nucleotide polymorphism

Single nucleotide in genomic DNA at which different sequence alternatives exist

 

In genetics and bioinformatics, a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP ; plural SNPs ) is a germline substitution of a single nucleotide at a specific position in the genome that is present in a sufficiently large fraction of considered population (generally regarded as 1% or more).

 

For example, a G nucleotide present at a specific location in a reference genome may be replaced by an A in a minority of individuals. The two possible nucleotide variations of this SNP – G or A – are called alleles.

 

SNPs can help explain differences in susceptibility to a wide range of diseases across a population. For example, a common SNP in the CFH gene is associated with increased risk of age-related macular degeneration. Differences in the severity of an illness or response to treatments may also be manifestations of genetic variations caused by SNPs. For example, two common SNPs in the APOE gene, rs429358 and rs7412, lead to three major APO-E alleles with different associated risks for development of Alzheimer's disease and age at onset of the disease.

 

Single nucleotide substitutions with an allele frequency of less than 1% are sometimes called single-nucleotide variants (SNVs). "Variant" may also be used as a general term for any single nucleotide change in a DNA sequence, encompassing both common SNPs and rare mutations, whether germline or somatic. The term SNV has therefore been used to refer to point mutations found in cancer cells. DNA variants must also commonly be taken into consideration in molecular diagnostics applications such as designing PCR primers to detect viruses, in which the viral RNA or DNA sample may contain SNVs. However, this nomenclature uses arbitrary distinctions (such as an allele frequency of 1%) and is not used consistently across all fields; the resulting disagreement has prompted calls for a more consistent framework for naming differences in DNA sequences between two samples.

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Wikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license

 

 

they went full homo