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Chromatid vs. Strand

Difference Between Chromatid and Strand

Chromatid

A chromatid (Greek khrōmat- 'color' + -id) is one half of a duplicated chromosome. Before replication, one chromosome is composed of one DNA molecule.
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Strand

Land, typically a beach, bordering a body of water.
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Chromatid

Either of the two daughter strands of a replicated chromosome that are joined by a single centromere and separate during cell division to become individual chromosomes.
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Strand

A complex of fibers or filaments that have been twisted together to form a cable, rope, thread, or yarn.
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Chromatid

(genetics) After DNA replication, either of the two connected double-helix strands of a metaphase chromosome that separate during mitosis.
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Strand

A single filament, such as a fiber or thread, of a woven or braided material.
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Chromatid

one of two identical strands into which a chromosome splits during mitosis.
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Strand

A ropelike length of something
a strand of pearls.
a strand of DNA.
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Chromatid

one of two identical strands into which a chromosome splits during mitosis
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Strand

A wisp or lock of hair.
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Strand

One of the elements woven together to make an intricate whole, such as the plot of a novel.
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Strand

To drive or run (a boat, for example) ashore or aground.
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Strand

To cause (a whale or other sea animal) to be unable to swim free from a beach or from shallow water.
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Strand

To bring into or leave in a difficult or helpless position
The convoy was stranded in the desert.
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Strand

(Baseball) To leave (a base runner) on base at the end of an inning.
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Strand

(Linguistics) To separate (a grammatical element) from other elements in a construction, either by moving it out of the construction or moving the rest of the construction. In the sentence What are you aiming at, the preposition at has been stranded.
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Strand

To be driven or run ashore or aground
The boat stranded on the rocks.
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Strand

To be stranded, as on a beach. Used of sea animals.
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Strand

To make or form (a rope, for example) by twisting strands together.
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Strand

To break a strand of (a rope, for example).
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Strand

The shore or beach of the sea or ocean; shore; beach.
Grand Strand
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Strand

The shore or beach of a lake or river.
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Strand

A small brook or rivulet.
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Strand

A passage for water; gutter.
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Strand

A street.
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Strand

Each of the strings which, twisted together, make up a yarn, rope or cord.
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Strand

A string.
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Strand

An individual length of any fine, string-like substance.
strand of spaghetti
strand of hair.
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Strand

(electronics) A group of wires, usually twisted or braided.
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Strand

(broadcasting) A series of programmes on a particular theme or linked subject.
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Strand

(figurative) An element in a composite whole; a sequence of linked events or facts; a logical thread.
strand of truth
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Strand

(genetics) A nucleotide chain.
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Strand

To run aground; to beach.
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Strand

To leave (someone) in a difficult situation; to abandon or desert.
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Strand

To cause the third out of an inning to be made, leaving a runner on base.
Jones pops up; that's going to strand a pair.
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Strand

(transitive) To break a strand of (a rope).
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Strand

(transitive) To form by uniting strands.
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Strand

One of the twists, or strings, as of fibers, wires, etc., of which a rope is composed.
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Strand

The shore, especially the beach of a sea, ocean, or large lake; rarely, the margin of a navigable river.
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Strand

To break a strand of (a rope).
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Strand

To drive on a strand; hence, to run aground; as, to strand a ship.
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Strand

To drift, or be driven, on shore to run aground; as, the ship stranded at high water.
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Strand

a pattern forming a unity within a larger structural whole;
he tried to pick up the strands of his former life
I could hear several melodic strands simultaneously
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Strand

line consisting of a complex of fibers or filaments that are twisted together to form a thread or a rope or a cable
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Strand

a necklace made by a stringing objects together;
a string of beads
a strand of pearls
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Strand

a very slender natural or synthetic fiber
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Strand

a poetic term for a shore (as the area periodically covered and uncovered by the tides)
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Strand

a street in west central London famous for its theaters and hotels
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Strand

leave stranded or isolated withe little hope og rescue;
the travellers were marooned
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