No. For a child to have AB, one parent must have either A or AB and the other must have B or AB. O is a recessive type to both, so neither parent has any of those bloodtypes; their child will be O.
It can be O-, but it won't be likely. In fact, this is one of the least likely scenarios where it is actually possible. IF the parents' genes each contains an "i" gene, and IF both of the parents have "+-" on the +/- axis, then it is possible (though highly unlikely, since the odds are 1 in 16).
No. If the mother is O it means she does not have A or B. Even if the father is AB he will only pass on A OR B, not both.
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.
No.
yes.
B positive or negative or, O positive or negative.
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
yes
95% not.
No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
I'm not sure how negative or positive is determined, but a B mother and O father can have a B child.
yes
No
No, because a baby gets their blood from their father, not their mother.