Definitely. One Rh positive parent is at least 50% likely to produce Rh positive offspring.
Nope. Your baby will turn out fine.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.
yes
it could be a- or ab+
yes, the mother could o negative
mother could be either B or AB and she could also be Negative or Positive.
No, the child could only be O+ or O-.
It's called "positive" and "negative" - yes the "A" father and "B" mother can each give a gene to produce "AB"; The Rhesus gene is either positive or negative so the baby could get either.
father blood type could be (A,B, or O) positive.
Yes. The mother would have to have a heterozygous Rh genotype, so that she could pass on an Rh negative allele to her offspring.
Yes -- There is not one gene that determines blood type. The father can be heterozygous for the A blood type. This just means that the father has one A gene and one O gene. Since the A gene is dominant, the blood from the father tests as A. A separate gene determines the positive and negative part of the blood grouping. This is the RH factor. Again the father can have one gene that is positive and one that is negative, positive is dominant. Same analysis for the mother, mixed B and O genes with B as dominant, positive and negative for RH factor, positive dominant. The egg from the mother could contain the B and RH negative (50% chance of each). The sperm from the father could contain the A and RH negative. Thus the baby would be AB negative (no positive from either parent).
father could be A positive, B positive, or O positive... i cud be more specific if i knew the his parents blood type
Yes, the child of these parents could have either blood type O+, O-, A+, or A-.