YES. Maybe both of your parents are half-Rh positive, but not a full-blown Rh positive. Your parents will have 25% chances of getting a Rh negative offspring (Out of 4 children, only 1 become Rh negative)
This comes true in our family. Both myself and my husband are Rh positive and our kid (3 years) is Rh negative. My blood group is B+ve, and my husband is A1B+ve and our kid is A1-ve.
No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
His father was Joseph James Thomson. His mother was Emma Swindell.
some examples of the mosiac law are 21:15 whoever strikes his father or his mother shall be put to death. 21:17 whoever curses his father or mother shall be out to death.
A nuclear family consists of a mother, father, and kids.
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If a person has the Rh factor, then they are positive. If they don't have the Rh factor, they are negative. The Rh factor is dominant, so a mother with it would have an Rh positive baby even if the father is negative for the Rh factor.
Yes, if the father is heterozygous for blood group A and heterozygous for positive rh factor.
Yes, the mother and father can have either an A or O child with the Rh factor of either - or +.
Yes, a father with A negative blood can have a child with A positive blood. If he does, the mother must have a positive Rh factor, and the mother's blood type may be any of the possibilities.
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.
type O and A is the type, you also have an Rh factor-either positive(meaning you have the factor) or negative(the Rh antigenis not present). All blood types can have a positive or negative rh factor so you need to know whether you and the father or RH positive or negative
Yes -- There is not one gene that determines blood type. The father can be heterozygous for the A blood type. This just means that the father has one A gene and one O gene. Since the A gene is dominant, the blood from the father tests as A. A separate gene determines the positive and negative part of the blood grouping. This is the RH factor. Again the father can have one gene that is positive and one that is negative, positive is dominant. Same analysis for the mother, mixed B and O genes with B as dominant, positive and negative for RH factor, positive dominant. The egg from the mother could contain the B and RH negative (50% chance of each). The sperm from the father could contain the A and RH negative. Thus the baby would be AB negative (no positive from either parent).
Yes.
Blood type and Rh factor do not affect the health of a child except in rare conditions, usually due to incompatibility with the mother and child when the father and are positive but the mother is negative.
# yes, if father is + - for RH and mother - - (negative) or + - (positive); the father can generate sons A, B, or AB depending by mother's group.
no
yes