Answer:
Racial Democracy is a term used by some to describe race relations in Brazil. The term denotes some scholars' belief that Brazil has escaped racism and racial discrimination. Those researchers contend that Brazilians do not view each other through the lens of race and do not harbor racial prejudice towards one another. Because of that, while social mobility of Brazilians may be constrained by many factors, gender and class included, racial discrimination is considered irrelevant (within the confines of the concept racial democracy).
Explanation:
Not gonna translate all that
speak english cuz i don't understand nun this
<u>The original cell that divides is called the </u><u>parent (mother)</u><u> cell</u>, while the two, new identical cells are called daughter cells. A cell normally divides into two new cells (once it has copied all its DNA). This process is called <u>mitosis</u>. Each new cell gets a complete copy of all the DNA, bundled up as 46 chromosomes.
<em>The cell cycle (stages in a cell's life) is made up of stages in which the cell grows and rests, copies its DNA, and </em><em><u>divides</u></em><em> into two new cells.</em>
It is a normal, positive part of growth. Hope this helps.