The child could be AB, A, B, or O. It all depends on what the genotypes are for the parents. If they are both homozygous dominant (AA and BB), they will have an AB child. If one is AA and the other BO, the child could be AB or A. Both A and B alleles are completely dominant over the O allele. They are codominant, however, and when a child receives both A and B alleles from her parents, he or she will be AB blood type.
can a mother of o blood group have a healthy child with a father type o
Absolutely. A child will either have its mother's blood type or its father's blood type. If the mother's blood type is NOT O, then someone else is the father.
ab
95% not.
No
The mother and father both have heterozygous alleles for the blood group A. The blood group A can have the alleles AA or AO, when both parents are AO, there is a one in four chance that the child will have blood group O as this blood group is recessive.
If the mother is A, and the father is A, then the child will only have A antigens and will thus be blood type A. If father or mother are AB, then the child can end up with AB, A, or B blood type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type
The child can have either A-type blood or O-type blood.
Probably more than likely A+. Because the +Rh gene is usually dominate. Take for instance- Mother is A+, Child is A=. Father is A=, In this instance the father has the dominate gene for the absence of the Rh antigen on the redcell. The mother is recessive.
Blood type A/B
If the mother is not AB, yes.
yeah its possible.