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  2. Cultural heritage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_heritage

    Cultural property includes the physical, or "tangible" cultural heritage, such as artworks. These are generally split into two groups of movable and immovable heritage. Immovable heritage includes buildings (which themselves may include installed art such as organs, stained glass windows, and frescos), large industrial installations, residential projects or other historic places and monum

  3. Partible inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partible_inheritance

    Partible inheritance, sometimes also called partitive, is a system of inheritance in which property is apportioned among heirs.It contrasts in particular with primogeniture, which was common in feudal society and requires that the whole or most of the inheritance passes to the eldest son, and with agnatic seniority, which requires the succession to pass to next senior male.

  4. What Is Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase (G6PD) Deficiency?

    www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/what-is-glucose-6...

    Causes. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency is hereditary, so you can’t “catch” it, and you won’t develop it by chance. There are no avoidable causes, but you can get tested or be ...

  5. Multiple inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_inheritance

    Multiple inheritance is a feature of some object-oriented computer programming languages in which an object or class can inherit features from more than one parent object or parent class. It is distinct from single inheritance, where an object or class may only inherit from one particular object or class.

  6. Autosomal Recessive Disease: Types, Symptoms, Diagnosis - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/children/autosomal-recessive-disease

    Some health problems are passed down through families. There are different ways this can happen. To have a child born with what’s called an “autosomal recessive disease” like sickle cell ...

  7. Hindu Succession Act, 1956 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_Succession_Act,_1956

    The Act lays down a uniform and comprehensive system of inheritance and succession into one Act. The Hindu woman's limited estate is abolished by the Act. Any property possessed by a Hindu female is to be held by her as absolute property and she is given full power to deal with it and dispose it of by will as she likes.

  8. Priority inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priority_inheritance

    In real-time computing, priority inheritance is a method for eliminating unbounded priority inversion.Using this programming method, a process scheduling algorithm increases the priority of a process (A) to the maximum priority of any other process waiting for any resource on which A has a resource lock (if it is higher than the original priority of A).

  9. Pseudodominance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudodominance

    Pseudodominance is the situation in which the inheritance of a recessive trait mimics a dominant pattern. [1]Normally, two recessive alleles need to be inherited (one from each parent) for the recessive trait to be expressed but recessive merely means that the trait is only expressed in the absence of the dominant alleles.