Yes, according to the site at the link below, a child can have A- blood, given parents of O+ and A+.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
If both parents are O ,,,,,,,,,,,, all kids will be O ,, no possibility for A
Yes! The genotypes of the parents can only be "OO" (means two O genes) so both of them cannot give a "B" gene to the child
7% plus or minus 1%
O plus.
No. The child would have A+
A+ and A- A+ and O-
possibility not
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
The blood types of the parents have little or no bearing on whether they can conceive a child.
normally they have "o" plus or negative.
No. The child could be either AA or Ao and they would have plus or minus, depending on if the a plus parent has plus plus, or plus minus
Yes, this is possible but with low percentage reaches to 25%.
If both parents are O ,,,,,,,,,,,, all kids will be O ,, no possibility for A
The blood types of the parents are largely irrelevant in terms of their ability to achieve conception of a child.
No. O is recessive to all other blood types. So if you're O you can't carry A or B. An AB child needs each parent to be carrying either A or B. Therefore two O parents cannot have an AB child.
All child's blood type will be O.mostly they will be positive, but they can have a negative child with a low percentage reaches to 25% ( if both parent genotype are heterogeneous ).