No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
YES. Maybe both of your parents are half-Rh positive, but not a full-blown Rh positive. Your parents will have 25% chances of getting a Rh negative offspring (Out of 4 children, only 1 become Rh negative) This comes true in our family. Both myself and my husband are Rh positive and our kid (3 years) is Rh negative. My blood group is B+ve, and my husband is A1B+ve and our kid is A1-ve.
No not unless your a troll
Red blood cells? Absolutely. (if the antibody screen and crossmatch are both negative) Whole blood? No, there may be Anti-D in the O neg plasma.
Rh antigen, which is also called D antigen, indicates if the blood type is positive or negative. The presence of this antigen indicates the patient is Rh positive, the absence of this antigen reflects a blood type of Rh Negative. For example, if a person is O Positive, the Rh antigen is present.
O blood is a recessive gene, if you have two O's, all you can have is O's.
Yes, a father with A negative blood can have a child with A positive blood. If he does, the mother must have a positive Rh factor, and the mother's blood type may be any of the possibilities.
No.
yes.
B positive or negative or, O positive or negative.
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
yes
95% not.
I'm not sure how negative or positive is determined, but a B mother and O father can have a B child.
yes
No
No, because a baby gets their blood from their father, not their mother.
a-