No. A kid has to have the bloodtype of its mother or father.
No
The baby can have either O- or O+ blood type.
Yes, they can.
It is possible that you have the same fathers, but you could also have different fathers. It really depends on the specifics of your parents' blood types.
The blood type will be the same as one of the parents or a combination, so A or AB. If the parents both have the same Rh factor (+ or -) the baby will have that factor, else it could also be either. The risky situation at birth is where the baby's Rh factor is not the same as the mother's.
Yes; the child receives a random blood allele from both parents, so unless both parents are type O, AA, or BB, the children can have different blood types
there is no relation between child personality and life with types of blood either they are the same or different.
If a child does not have the same blood type as either the father or the mother there is nothing to worry about. It is fairly common for a child to have a blood type that combines the blood types of the parents, such as an AB negative child whose parents had A negative and B negative blood.
No. Often a child can have a completely different blood type from their parents or even the same. It really depends on their genetics.Some combinations of parents are unable to get children with certain blood types - assuming no mutations occur.Regarding the AB0-system:If both parents have blood type 0, all their children will have blood type 0.If both parents have blood type A, no children will have blood type B or AB.If both parents have blood type B, no children will have blood type A or AB.If both parents have blood type AB, no children will have blood type 0.Of course you can be more specific if you know the parents' genes.
The two AB parents could have any of an A, B or AB, but not O.The two A parents could have either A or O children, but not B or AB.The two B parents could have either B or O children, but not A or AB.The two O parents could only have O children; they cannot have have A, B or AB.If both parents have rhesus-negative blood, so will their children. If both have positive, the child might be either.
You get your blood type (phenotype) from your parents, each of whom carry their parents blood types (genotype) in their blood. Your ethnicity plays a minor factor because some races tend toward different blood types, but any member of any race can end up with any blood type. Four children of the same parents could all have the different types of blood.
It is possible if your parents have different blood types. Example, if your father is A with a recessive O, and mother is B with a recessive O, you could easily land up with a O blood group. However, an AB father can have only an A, B or AB child depending on the mothers blood group, but surely NOT 'O.'