Yes
I'll wait for you to ask the question. Positive parents can have a negative baby as positive is dominant so they may both have one positive and one negative gene and the baby gets the two negative genes.
No, it is not possible.
a positive
not chance,but rarely can be.
a negative times a negative is a positive so the answer is positive
If both parents have Type B blood the only blood type the child can have is either B or O not looking at whether one of the parents is negative or not.
it it possible if someone from either parents' family has had it or haves it because of genes
no, he has at least one - but the other half could be + or - if baby is -- then both parents gave - meaning they both are one of these +- or --
No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
Yes. The child will be either A positive or B positive or even AB positive. If the grandparents have a negative (A negative, B negative), there is a slight chance that the child will have a negative. A type O is out of the question. The fact that there are two positive parents means that there is no risk to the mother of Rh negative disorders.
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.
If the fetus is O positive, there will be no problem. If the fetus is O negative and is the first O negative baby, nothing will happen to it, but the subsequent O negative fetuses will be miscarried unless the mother takes some special injections during this pregnancy.