No, those are two different blood types. You may only have one. Ab+, AB-, A+, A-, B+, A-, O+, O-: these are the possibilities.
Yes, no worry about ABO.
Yes,but if the baby is blood type B then there is ABO incompatibility.
A person with blood type AB cannot give blood to anyone but can receive blood from anyone
Her blood type will be A.
A
In addition to type A, B, and O, there is type AB. This blood type is the rarest of the four.
Ia Ib
Yes, no worry about ABO.
In the ABO system, it is O blood type that contains no surface antigens.
NO. Not at all. Each parent has an A or a B to contribute to the child. Therefore, the only possibilities for the child are: An A from each parent (making it an A) A B from each parent (making it a B) and An A from one, and a B from the other, (making it an AB). This a super-simple answer. For more detail on ABO blood grouping, type in ABO on wiki. NO. Not at all. Each parent has an A or a B to contribute to the child. Therefore, the only possibilities for the child are: An A from each parent (making it an A) A B from each parent (making it a B) and An A from one, and a B from the other, (making it an AB). This a super-simple answer. For more detail on ABO blood grouping, type in ABO on wiki.
ABO and Rh
To type blood according to abo, the lab detects the proteins of the cells to determine whether blood is a b or o. To further type blood into rh- and rh positive, the lab checks antibodies to specific proteins.