Either, neither; it's just like any other genetic characteristic. The baby is more likely to end up with a similar type to one parent, though it is not certain.
well my daughter has neither mine or my partners (p.s. she is not adopted and i assure you she is his xx)
No, absolutly not. The baby blood type may be same with mother's or father's or sometimes none of these.
When a baby is born they are assigned a blood type. The blood type will come from each of their parents. Each parent donates one of their ABO alles to their child or children.
the mom does but most dont care for babys
both from parent either father r mother
Both parents.
Both :)
Could be anything, we get our blood group from either parents or grandparents.
To explain this properly you would have to have a basic understanding of inheritance, but I'll do my best. Blood groups are inherited as a pair. A and B groups are co-dominant and O is the recessive. So mum is genotype AA or AO, which would make her group A and dad is genotype BB or BO making him group B. So baby will inherit one from each parent: so baby could be AB or AO or BO or OO. If A is inherited from mum and B from dad then baby is group AB if its A from mum and O from dad then its group A; if its O from mum and B from dad then its group B. If O is inherited from both parents then baby is group O.
No; the ABO group has no ill effect on the child. Rhesus factor is more important, as different Rh-type can result in hemolytic disease of the fetus.
The baby will either be blood type O or Type A
The child will have AB as her Blood group Not necessarily. If maternal blood group is A(AO) and paternal group is B(BO) then baby could inherit A from mum and O from dad - O is always recessive so blood group would be A Rh grouping (neg or pos) is inherited as a triplet code so could be either pos or neg
yes
No, because O is recessive. So, the mom and dad both have OO alleles for blood types. Due to that, they each have to give the baby an O allele, so the baby will be OO.
The rhesus factor (positive and negative) isn't important so...The A (and B) blood type genes are dominant over O (which actually just means the lack of A/B). Since mum and dad are both blood type O neither mum or dad have the A gene which means the baby cannot be type A. A different dad (or mum) with blood type A or AB would be needed.
Why are you asking this. Do you foresee some harms in marrying a person with a particulare blood group.
A family friend who runs the church group.
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.
It's possible if both parents are heterozygous for both Rh factor and ... type-A-ness, whatever the word for that is. That is if they're both +- and AO genetically, they'd both have blood type A positive, but they'd both have the potential to pass along blood type O and Rh factor negative. If the baby gets O- from both mom and dad, then the baby would be OO -- and therefore O negative.It's not necessarily what you would expect (7 times out of 8, the baby would be type A, Rh postive, or both), but it is possible.If they have a B negative baby, mom's been fooling around on dad.