no!! never
The above answer is incorrect--the red-headed gene is recessive--just because brown hair is dominant does not mean that those brown-heads don't carry the gene mutation for red hair! Research on this question suggests that freckled skin on non-red-heads may be a sign that the recessive gene for red hair is present.
Yes, I think it depends on how much genetics, from each parent, the child gets.
yes if both parents have a gene for red hair, two are needed because it is a recessive gene.
It is possible but sometimes, it skips a generation or two(even 3 and 4)
Of course not all parent give children their genes of their hair color you can't tell the "race" or "Who's the BabyDaddy" by the hair color.
yes any one can have a red head child
There is a 26% chance that the child of two left-handed parents will be left-handed.
yes because two parents with recessive traits do not have the dominant allele to pass onto the child
No.
It all depends on the genes of the two parents. The child would be bi-racial.
Could only be A+
There is a 26% chance that the child of two left-handed parents will be left-handed.
No. Two rhesus-negative parents cannot have a rhesus-positive child.
when the two parents that are dating become married and are legal
No genetics show that two ugly parents will make a really really ugly child. Its said that two uglies= beautiful child and two prettys= ugly child. Its not entirely true but it does happen, often a little bit though.
yes because two parents with recessive traits do not have the dominant allele to pass onto the child
Maybe, it depends.
it is possible but the child can be a positive
Yes. The geneotype for both parents must be AO+- for the child to be OO--
Yes, if both parents have the genotype AO, then the child can have the O from both parents, phenotype O
The child should follow which ever he or her chooses to identify themselves :)
A child of two first cousins is the child of the parents and they are the child's mother and father. As the child of one first cousin, the child is also the first cousin, once removed, of the other parent. That, however, is of no importance. The closer relationship of parent and child is the one that really matters.
Your son or daughter. Just because the child gets a new set of parents, doesn't mean that the birth parents cease to exist. Adopted children have two sets of parents and both parents will call that child theirs.