No - this is not possible. The child must inherit one allele from each parent. This means that if one parent is AB, they must donate either an A or a B to the child.
This means that the only possible blood types are A, B and AB (depending on whether the other parent is BO or BB). If the parent with B blood type is homozygous, BB, then the child can only be B or AB.
The child could be A+, AB+, B+, A-, AB-, or B-. That is, any blood type except O positive or O negative.
No. For a child to be born with AB blood, one parent would have to have A blood and the other B, or either can have AB and the other A or B.
Ab+ universal receiver o- universal donor blood types: can donate to: can receive from: ab+: ab+: ab+ ab- a+ a- b+ b- o+ o- ab-: ab+ ab-: ab- b- a- o- a+: a+ ab+: a+ a- o+ o- a-: a+ a- ab+ ab-: a- o- b+: b+ ab+: b+ b- o+ o- b-: b- b+ ab- ab+: b- o- 0+: o+ a+ b+ ab+: o- o+ o-: o+ o- a+ a- b+ b- ab+ ab-: o-
No. O is recessive. The parents would have to have A and B phenotypes in order for their child to have AB- blood.
It is possible if your parents have different blood types. Example, if your father is A with a recessive O, and mother is B with a recessive O, you could easily land up with a O blood group. However, an AB father can have only an A, B or AB child depending on the mothers blood group, but surely NOT 'O.'
possibility of b or o not ab
No. B type can only have B, O, and AB. A child with A blood would have to have at least one parent be A or AB.
No. A and B are dominant blood types and O is recessive. A parent with blood type AB can only donate a dominant A or dominant B. A child with blood type O would need to come from parents with one of the following combinations: A-A, A-B, A-O, B-O, O-O
No. The child will have either type A or type B blood.
Either A or B; AB and O are impossible.
Not normally. Father can only contribute an O. Mother can contribute a B, or perhaps an O (if she has BO genes). Child would be either O or B (with BO genes). However, rare exceptions do exist.
No. AB parents cannot have O type children; however, A, B, and O can have O type children. If the father is AB and the mother is A the child will have to be either A, B or AB.