no
No, two parents with an O positive blood type cannot have a child with an AB negative blood type. The ABO blood group system requires one parent to contribute an A or B allele for an AB child, which an O parent cannot provide. Additionally, for a child to be Rh negative (like AB negative), at least one parent must carry an Rh negative allele, which is also not possible if both parents are Rh positive.
there is no way to really tell. the child would most likely have O+ or O- but they could have A+, A-,B+,B-,AB+,AB-
The baby could be either B positive or O positive. The baby's blood type is determined by the combination of genes from the mother and father. Since the father's blood type is O positive, the baby has a chance of inheriting either B or O from the mother.
No, the child has to have one of the parents blood type.
The child has A,O blood groups.
A child is born with his/her own blood.
Blood Stain Child was created in 1999.
No, a child's blood group does not have to match either parent's blood group exactly. A child's blood group is determined by a combination of the parents' blood types, following specific inheritance patterns. It is possible for a child's blood group to be different from that of their parents.
The child can have either A-type blood or O-type blood.
yes
Yes, a parent with blood type AC and another with blood type AS can potentially have a child with blood type AC. The child inherits one allele from each parent, and since both parents carry the A and C alleles, it is possible for them to pass on the A and C alleles to their child. Therefore, the child can have blood type AC.
No, a child's blood type is determined by the combination of the parents' blood types. The child's blood type will always be a result of the parents' genetic information.