Mulatto or bi-racial. They normally affiliate themselves with blacks.
Yes. The father's phenotype is AO+*; the mother's is OO--.
Yes. The father's phenotype is AO+*; the mother's is OO--.
Skin color is determined by the combination of genes from both parents. A black mother and white father can have a mixed-race child with a range of skin tones. However, a white mother and white father cannot have a black child because both parents lack the genes for producing darker skin pigmentation.
no
No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor. No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor.
yes it can
Yes.
Yes
Since both parents are Rh+, the child will also be Rh+.If the Mother is A0+ and Father is AB+, the child will be: AA+ AB+ AO+ or BO+ So yes this does produce a B+ child.If the Mother is AA+ and the Father is AB+, the child will be AB+ or AA+ neither of these is B+ so this doesn't produce a B+ child.
No, This is impossible!
Depends on what the other parent is. If the mulatto parent was half black and half white, the child would be 25% black, 25% white, and 50% whatever the other parent is.
no because the black mom could have had the child before she married the white man