Yes, we all get our blood groups from either our parents and even grandparents.
0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive! 0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive!
Positive 3 is > 0 while, negative 2 is < 0. So positive 3 > negative 2.
0 can never be positive or negative BUT Neutral.
no 0 is neither positive or negative
Mathematically speaking, 0 is neither positive nor negative. In machine language in computers, 0 is considered as "positive" since the negative flag is not set.
Yes
The father would be fat.
Yes, the child of these parents could have either blood type O+, O-, A+, or A-.
If a mother has blood group 0 positive and the father is also 0 positive can they give birth to a child with blood group 0 negative?
Then the father of the child is someone else with B Negative blood group.
Yes, the child of these parents could have either blood type O+, O-, A+, or A-.
Yes they can, First of all, the chance that they have an 0 child is 50%. It can be A of 0. The chance however that the child is Rhesus negative is 25%. So 0,5*0,25= 0,125 = 12,5 % chance the kid is 0-. RV
yes, 2 positives can have a negative, but not the other way around. I have a son like that.
yes, like if both parents are blond, child may have black hair
These are the possibilities: A neg or A pos B neg or B pos The father will always give an 0 to the child, which is infact zero. The mother will give an A or a B. An A and 0 gives A An B and 0 gives B The rhesus factor can be positive or negative.
Yes they can.
Yes. The mother would have to have a heterozygous Rh genotype, so that she could pass on an Rh negative allele to her offspring.