It would technically be considered your half- cousin since you do have the same grandmother but a different grandfather.
Yes, in that case your grandchild would also be your fourth cousin twice removed. But that relationship is rather minor compared to the grandparent/grandchild relationship. It can readilly be ignored.
If two people have great grandmothers who were sisters, the two people are third cousins.
If two people's great grandmothers were first cousins then the two people are fourth cousins to each other.
Two people whose grandmothers were first cousins are fourth cousins to each other. The have great great grandparents in common.
Assuming that their grandparents are 1st cousins, then the two people are 3rd cousins.
Yes, you would be considered first cousins.
If your great great grandmothers were sisters, your common ancestors are your great great great grandparents. That makes you 4th cousins.
Children of sisters are first cousins. Grandchildren of sisters are second cousins. Great grandshildren of sisters are third cousins.
If you and someone else have grandmothers who were First Cousins, the parents of those grandmothers were siblings and you and someone else have great-great-grandparents in common. Therefore you and someone else are Third Cousins.
Your grandmother's sisters are your Great Aunts.
You are third cousins.
Your ancestors are the people whose children lead eventually to you. They are your mother and father, grandmothers and grandfathers, great grandparents, great great grandparents, etc. Your cousins are the children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, etc, of the brothers and sisters of your ancestors.
First cousins twice removed.
Person 1's great grandmother is Person 2's aunt: Person 2's parents are Person 1's great great uncle and aunt. Person 2 is a first cousin of one of Person 1's grandparents Person 2 is a first cousin once removed of one of Person 1's parents Person 2 is a first cousin twice removed of Person 1 In simple terms, Person 1 and Person 2 are first cousins twice removed.
Yes, along with your grandfathers' sisters, if any.
The two great grandmothers are first cousins to each other and therefore share a grandparent. That common ancestor is the great-great-great-grandparent of both Jack and Jill. * First cousins share a grandparent. * Second cousins share a great-grandparent. * Third cousins share a great-great-grandparent. * Fourth cousins share a grea-great-great-grandparent. Jack and Jill are fourth cousins to each other
Two people are second cousins to each other if their grandparents are siblings (bothers of sisters). Since your grandmother and his grandmother are second cousins, you and he each have a great great grandparent who were siblings, and that means that you both have a great great great grandparent in common. You can start counting generations from that common ancestor and determine that you and he are fourth cousins. The easy way to figure your relationship to him is to count generations from your grandmothers, whom you know are second cousins. The children of second cousins are third cousins to each other - that is your parent and his parent. The children of third cousins are fourth cousins to each other - that is you and him. You and he are fourth cousins to each other.
Of course it could have a hundred people it can like your ancestors, siblings, cousins, and great-great-great grandmothers and grandads. Yes a family can have 100 people but they might have passed away.