My husband is A+ and I am O-. We have two children. Our daughter is O+ and our son is A+. A is dominant, O is recessive. + is dominant, - is recessive. Therefore in this situation it is possible to have children with O+, O-, A+, and A- so long as the father carries the recessive genes.
It all depends on what the recessive gene of both parents are. With type A blood, you can have a recessive a or o. Technically, the parents blood type would be Aa or Ao. Depending on which each of them have, the only possibilities of the child's blood type would be A or O. The only way for the child to have O blood is if both parents carry the o recessive and the child gets an O from both parents. A child gets one gene from each parent, one of which will be dominate and the other recessive. The exception being, if the parents had B and A, or one had AB and the other had A or B, the baby could have AB blood, in which case, there is no recessive gene, as both AB are equal. The same holds true with positive and negative blood types. A person with positive blood can still have a negative recessive gene and pass it along, so I child whose parents are both positive can still have negative blood.
It will probably most likely be B positive
A negative
The baby will normally be A positive.
Well the baby will have an O positive blood type.
No, because a baby gets their blood from their father, not their mother.
If the father's blood type is O positive and the mother's blood type is B positive, a child could have type B or type O blood, and the Rh factor could be positive or negative.
Yes, if the mother has type A or AB blood.
A, b, ab
a positive
only if one of the parents is a chimera
With a mother with AB Positive blood type and a father with an O Positive blood type, there are four possibilities for the offspring's blood type. The child of this pairing could have A positive or negative, or B positive or negative type blood.
No.
yes, blood type is not genetic
He mother and father have nothing to do with the child's blood type