No. The O+ gene is exclusive, meaning that if you are O+, your body only has the O+ gene, so your child can't be anything other than 0+ as well.
He can only be A+ if the one of the parents is AB+ or A+.
NO...they can not...a+ & a- parents can only have a children...
Yes, they could have: A+, A-, O+, or O-.
Yes, AO + AO could be OO.
The blood type for both parents must be OO since the O blood type is recessive. That means the child will definitely be O. The mother, since she has an Rh factor of + must be either ++ or +-. The father must be --. So, if the mother is ++, then the child will be O+. If the mother is +-, then there is a 50% chance that the child is O- and a 50% chance that they will be O+.
Must be AA, or AO because the mother having O blood, which is homozygous recessive, must be OO. The signs mean little here except the father must carry them and the child inherited them from the father.
No. The child will be type O+ or O-.
No. The child will be either group A or group B, but not group O. This is because the father can donate only a group A gene or a group B gene, so since group A and group B are dominant over group O, the child could not have group O blood.
Yes. The father's phenotype is AO+*; the mother's is OO--.
no
No
no
No!
MOTHER IS o+ father is A- the child will be which group
The father's blood type can be O, A, or B.
poiuyt
Yes. I am O positive and my husband is A positive. We have two A positive children and one O positive child.
in rare case yes.
Yes. If the father were BO+ and the mother were AO+, there is a 25% chance their child could be an O+.
Yes.... because blood trait A is dominant on blood trait O... the child will then have blood group A
Yes, it is possible for both mother and father to be RH positive and a child to be RH negative.