No. One of the parents would have to be type A or AB.
both of his/her parents should be type O.
If both parents are type O blood they will only have type O children
Yes
No. If both parents are type O, the child will also be type O.
If BOTH the parents have Type O blood, then their child has a 100% chance of having Type O blood. If ONE of the parents has Type O blood, then it has a lower chance. For more information, look up "Punnett Squares"
The child's blood type is determined by his or her parents' blood types. If both parents have type A, the child can have either type A or O. If both parents have type B, the child can have either type B or O. If one parent has type A and the other parent has type B, the child can have type A, B, AB, or O, but he/she is most likely to have type AB. If both parents have type O, the child will have type O.
No. It is not possible for a child to have A if the parents are O blood type. If both parents have type O blood, then their children will also have type O blood. However, two parents with type A or type B blood (both the same or one of each) can sometimes have a child with type O blood. That is because the gene for type O blood is recessive. But they must carry the O type. However, two parents with type AB blood can have a child with type A, type B, or type AB blood, but cannot have a child with type O blood.
Yes, if both parents have the genotype AO, then the child can have the O from both parents, phenotype O
Yes. Both parents could be heterozygous, that is AO, and pass on the O to their child.
No. The parents must both have the type O allele in order for their child to be O.
Parents of blood type O can only have children with blood type O. Because type O is recessive, you know that the parents are homozygous O.
The child has to get his/her blood type from the parents. So therefore if both parents are O type then the kid has to be O type. This makes sense to me.
Yes, blood type has no bearing on weather or not the parents can have a child