Brown unless the mothers parent has blue eyes. Some cases are very different. It really depends on how many children the parents have or are planning to have. Most of the children will have brown eyes in this case. 1 out of 4 will have either blue or a green pigment. If the parent has only 1-3 children it is highly likey that their eyes will be brown instead of blue/green. This is not 100% that any of the children will have blue/green even if there were 8 children. It depends on how the gene "deals the hand of cards" to each individual child. Its more like a 65-75% chance that 1 out of 4 will have a blue/green eye color. If lucky the first child could very well have blue/green eyes, but the possibility is very slim.
If both parents are Bb, then you have a 1 in 4 chance of having a blue-eyed child. Brown is a dominant gene, so BB or Bb would be brown, whereas bb would be blue. If one parent has BB then a blue eyed child would be impossible.
Mothers father brown-eyed, mother blue-eyed. fathers mother brown eyed, father blue-eyed.
Yes, if brown eyes ever appeared in any family member in the past, on either the father's or the mother's side of the family, the gene exists that could give their child brown eyes.
Yes. The woman can be heterogeneous non-blue. That means she carries a blue eyed gene and a non-blue eyed gene. The blue eyed is normally recessive so he carries both blue eye genes and doesn't carry a non-blue gene.If two blue eyed parents have a child then the child will be blue eyed.
Yes, as long as one of their Grandparents/ Great Grandparents has blue eyes. If both pairs of Grandparents have brown eyes then it is VERY unlikely :)
Yes!
it depends on the DNA what the child takes from ,eather the women or the man
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.
yes, but rarely.
It is possible for a child with a brown-eyed parent and a green-eyed parent to have blue eyes if there is the trait for blue eyes in the child's genetics. Such as a grandparent with blue eyes.
Yes
Yes
its impossible
you jackass
It depends on whether either of them is carrying a brown eye trait. If so, their children will have brown eyes. If not, blue eyes are recissive so it will also depend on whether they are heterozigous blue or homozigous blue, if hetero- it is a 50-50 chance, if homo- their child will have blue eyes.