NO. You have to remember that each parent contributes one gene.
For instance, look at these examples:
When it comes to ABO blood type, both parents contribute in some manner to the child. A Punnett square can demonstrate potential blood types, where the father and mother each have or don't have A and B antigens. If the Father has A type blood and the mother has B type blood, the child has an equal chance to get A, B, AB, and O blood types. Alternatively, if the father has AB and the mother has O, there's a 50% chance for A type and 50% chance for B-type, and 0% chance for either AB or O.
You can only be sure of that if the mother has the same blood type as the father of the children.
not at all, the parent(s) can be of different group
Your blood is yours.
Not always.
yes
The child will be O- or A-.
There is a 2 out of 4 chance that the child will be Rh +. The group could be 3 out of 4 that the child will be an A. So depending upon whether the fathers positive Rh is dominate gene.Yes there is a possiblity that a child from this couple would be A +.
the daughter
no
someone`s daughter
Yes.
When a child is born out of wed lock.is the child last would be the mothers or the fathers last name? fathers name
A child is born with his/her own blood.
my mothers blood was o negative and because the child gets the fathers blood; which wasn't o negative my mother had to reveive shots
I would say A, now it also depends on RH factor which is positive and negative, but usually a child will have either mothers or fathers type blood but since both are A child had to be A cause it is recessive
yes...if the father has custody of the child or children then a woman has to pay child support just like a man.
AB