Yes. The parents' blood types are AO and AO so the baby will be OO. And since at least one parent is Rh+, the child will be Rh+.
No
yes
No.
A person with A positive blood may be a carrier for O negative blood. If the other parent is also a carrier of those traits, the baby could be O negative.
Of course!
No. There's a small chance the baby will be O negative--if both parents have an Rh negative (recessive) allele, and the baby inherits this allele from both parents, the baby would be Rh negative. But if the baby inherits the Rh positive allele from either parent, the baby will be Rh positive.
No. A positive O blood type means that each parent has two copies of the O blood type allele and can only give an O to their baby. The baby must have the blood type O. However, it can be O positive or O negative.
No. A positive O blood type means that each parent has two copies of the O blood type allele and can only give an O to their baby. The baby must have the blood type O. However, it can be O positive or O negative.
No. A positive O blood type means that each parent has two copies of the O blood type allele and can only give an O to their baby. The baby must have the blood type O. However, it can be O positive or O negative.
The baby could have almost any bloodtype except for O.
no cause a positive and negative make a negative unless the positive has a really strong blood line
Either A- or B-. The AB parent will pass on either the A or the B. The other parent, of course, will pass on the O, which becomes recessive against either the A or B. Since both parents are negative, the child will also be negative by default.