No - the child must recieve one allele from each parent. This means that because one parent is AB they must donate an A or a B to the child.
In order for the child to be O both parents must have at least one O (AO, BO or OO).
The other parent would have to have blood type O to have a child with that blood type.
If the parent's blood type is AB and B, the possible blood type of the baby is A, B, or AB.
the child takes the A gene from one parent and B from the other. And the both of parent are supposed to be AB blood type, or one A blood type and the other B.
No.
No. In order for someone to have AB blood, they must inherit the A from one parent and the B from the other. Therefore a parent with O blood could only have A, B or O children (depending on the blood type of the other parent).
yes, that is exactly what AB blood is and that is how blood type is inherited. Nice work
A man with any blood type by AB can father a child with type O blood. A parent heterozygous for type A or B may have a child with type O.
No. Neither parent can be AB blood type. Each parent must have at least one resessive gene for O blood type. Either parent could be type A or B or O.
Either A or B; AB and O are impossible.
A B+ parent can have a child with A+ blood. The other parent must be type A or type AB for this to occur.
No - children do not have to have the same blood type as the parents. For example, if one parent has blood type A and the other has blood type AB, the child might have A, B or AB blood types. (For the child to have B, the parent with blood type A would need to be heterozygous, Ao)
No. A parent with AB blood cannot have a child with O blood type.