It would be crying, because since 1-month olds cannot walk, they get frustrated and cry. So mostly when your 1-month old crys, don't pick her/him up, just pat him\her on the back, and don't walk around as much!!
If they are expressing the trait, 100%, as their genotypes would be, rr X rr If they both carry the trait and it is dominated, Rr X Rr, then the probability would be, 25% of their child expressing the trait.
Why would a 18 month old child faint?
The child would have A plus blood type since A blood type is a dominant trait while O blood type is a recessive trait
because that persons grandma or grandpa or one of their past realatives could have had that trait
At least one parent would have to have an RH Positive blood type. Beyond that you can not tell. Because the O trait is a recessive trait, either parent could have A or B or O blood, since, for example, a parent with A blood could have one A gene and one O gene that together would express the A trait. That parent's child could inherit either the A gene or the O gene. The other parent could have B based upon one B gene and one O gene that together would express the B trait. That other parent's child could inherit either the B gene or the O gene. Only if the child of both parents inherited an O gene from each parent, would the child have O blood. As to the RH factor, it is a dominant trait, so that if the child has the trait expressed, it would have to have been in one of the two parents. Hope this helps.
Ask the people there how much it would cost to send your three month old child for one month. Hoped it helped.
No. The trait that causes sickle cell anemia is a recessive trait, which means that if both parents have the trait, there is a 1/4 chance their child will have it. The child can be a carrier however and not display symptoms, but there is no way for a child to get sickle cell from parents that don't have the gene.
That would be called genes. Genes is when a characteristic is past on from a mother to its child or a father to its child.
November
Yes, Albinism is a recessive trait. You may be carriers of it but it doesn't necessarily mean that your child will have it. Your parents could have been carriers of it but not had it. The albinism just happened to be mixes into your genes.
no, as that would create an overpayment.
The Phenotype would be a straight hairline. The genotype would be aa.