No.
No. If both parents are A negative the child can only be A negative or O negative. If the child is AB positive at least one parent must have type B or AB blood and at least one must be RH positive.
No
absolutely. as long as one of the parents is positive, the child can be positive. and if one parent is A the other B, the child can be A, B, AB or O depending on the parents' other alleles. so the child can definitely be A or B positive, but also A negative, B negative, AB negative, AB positive, O positive or O negative.
yes
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. If both parents are A negative the child can only be A negative or O negative. If the child is AB positive at least one parent must have type B or AB blood and at least one must be RH positive.
No
No. O is recessive. The parents would have to have A and B phenotypes in order for their child to have AB- blood.
absolutely. as long as one of the parents is positive, the child can be positive. and if one parent is A the other B, the child can be A, B, AB or O depending on the parents' other alleles. so the child can definitely be A or B positive, but also A negative, B negative, AB negative, AB positive, O positive or O negative.
yes
Of course, you got your blood group from one of your parents or one of your grandparents.
The child will be A or B or AB, Rh+ or Rh- . So yes, the child can be A-.
Yes, if the AB parent contributes a B allele, and the O parent contributes an O allele, then the child will be BO, and will have type B blood.
No, an O-group parent cannot have an AB-group child at all.
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.
Both parents being type AB does not cause problems, no. The child will be type A, B, or AB. However, if the mother is negative, and the father and child are positive, it is possible for the baby to be at risk.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.