Yes, in fact it is the most likely combination.
It depends on the genes because some genes from the parents might not get passed on making the baby have brown eyes
Yes. If the mom and dad both have one recessive gene for blue eyes, there is a 25% chance that the child will have blue eyes. Since the blue eyed gene is hidden when the brown eyed gene is present, the parents will appear to have brown eyes even if they still contain the gene.
Theoretically, a blue eyed man and a blue eyed woman cannot produce a brown-eyed child. The reason is that neither parent carries the brown-eyed gene. If the father or mother did carry the brown-eyed gene, the eyes/irises of that parent would be brown. The gene for brown is dominant over the gene for blue. However, two brown eyed parents can produce a blue eyed child. In that case, each parent with brown eyes must carry the gene for blue - the parents' eyes are brown because the brown gene is dominant over the blue gene. However, if the child inherits a blue gene from both brown eyed parents, the result will be blue eyes although both parents have brown eyes. In the case of one parent with brown eyes and one parent with blue eyes, there is a possibility that the parent with brown eyes possesses the non-dominant blue gene. If the child inherits the blue gene from that brown eyed parent, the child's eyes will be blue since the gene from the other parent with blue eyes will be blue. There is a condition known as heterochromia iridis where one eye is brown and one eye is blue. This condition is usually pathological on a neurogenic or inflammatory basis with the abnormality usually being in the lighter/ blue eye. Acquired heterochromia iridis that develops in an adult may suggest a melanoma of the iris in the brown eye.
There is no way to tell for sure, they could have blue, green, or a mix (blue-green). Its even possible that the mom or dad could have some brown eye genes in the from previous ancestors and the kid could have brown eyes!
Brown is dominant and Green is somewhere in the middle. There are possibilities that this may occur but without the genes then it is hard to tell. To get blue eyes both parents would need blue eyed recessive genes and the kid would have to receive both those recessive genes which is very rare. In this case blue eyes is not a sex-linked gene so its possible the the male and female with have a female with blue eyes. Most likely the child will have brown eyes though. This is because if the son does get the recessive from the mother, but gets the dominant from the father, the dominant will overpower the recessive and the son will just be another blue eye gene carrier and himself have brown eyes.
because some traits are hidden like if you have browns eyes and your a Bb then you are hidding a blue eyed trait if yu have brown eyes and so does your husband and your kid has blue eyes then your hidding a blue gene
Yes, two blue eyed people can produce brown eyed offspring, this usually occurs because there is a brown eyed family member which is directly related, eg. grandparent or great-grandparent, due to the fact that the genes are still in the family even if they lie dormant and skip a generation or two.
A person can only pass on genes that he/she has inherited from his/her parents. You may be talking about a situation in which a recessive gene is not expressed in a child because it inherited a dominant allele as well, and is heterozygous for that trait. If that child then has his/her own child, the recessive trait could be expressed in the children of that child, if the other parent also carries the recessive allele.Example: One parent has brown eyes, the other has blue eyes. Their child inherited a brown eye allele and a blue eye allele, and has brown eyes, but is heterozygous. This child then has a child with another brown-eyed person, and their offspring has blue eyes, even though both parents have brown eyes. It just so happens that both of these parents are heterozygous for brown eyes, so they both carry the recessive blue-eyed allele which they each passed on to their blue-eyed offspring. So, this makes it look like the blue-eyed allele skipped a generation, but in reality it was always there, but not always expressed.
Well it could be possible. It depends on whether the parents have developed genes from both side of their families, or just one, it is possible. I know this because my sisters dad was a blue eyed person as well as my mother and she has Green eyes, but her granddad had blue eyes and her nan Hasel. (SORRY ABOUT THE LONG LIFE STORY)
blue and brown
sure if theyr grand parents did Hmm...I don't think so. I think that brown is dominant over blue, so blue wouldn't be able to show up. But, most caucasian (white) babies are born with blue eyes, which then gain pigment and change color. I hope this answers your question! --A WikiAnswers user
Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.Yes, there can be the recessive genes from generations passed.