Yes she can. There are two possible blood-types for the child in this scenario: AO (or A) and BO (or B).
No
Yes she can. There are two possible blood-types for the child in this scenario: AO (or A) and BO (or B).
No. An AB father does not have an O allele and can only pass on an A or B allele to his child. So the child will either be type A or type B, but not O.
No. The mother must be either AO or AA, and the father OO. No combination of these can give rise to an AB child. However, a negative mother and a positive father can have a negative child, by rhesus factors, if the father has genotype +-.
The father can be A-, A+, AB-, or AB+
The child inherits one allele from each parent for their blood type. You said that the mom is o+ and so is the child. Therefore: The father cannot have the following blood type genotypes: AB+, AB-, AA+, AA-, BB+, or BB-. The father's blood type genotypes can be: Ao+, Ao-, Bo+, or Bo-.
NO
no
No. If the child is AB, it must have inherited the A from one parent and the B from the other. If the father is O he has OO - and so cannot give the child an A or B.
My dad is AB- and my mom is O+. I was told that my blood type could be any with this combination of parents. As it turns out I am B+.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.