Simply one half her father and half her mother
1 in 4
You're doing it wrong.
3 in 4 chance
Well no one can answer that because you didn't use capitals and lowercase. Capital means dominant and lowercase means recessive. Use a punnet square and figure it out yourself, dumbo.
Assuming T is dominant and t is recessive, and neither are sex-linked, Clara's mother and father are both tall. They have a 1:4 chance of have having a tall child with the genotype TT, a 1:2 chance of having a tall child with the genotype Tt, and a 1:4 chance of having a short child with the genotype tt. If neither T or t is dominant or recessive, both parents should be of medium height, with a 1:4 chance of having a tall child, a 1:2 change of having a medium height child, and a 1:4 chance of having a short child.
Yes, this is possible.
3 in 4
Blood types are based on genetic contributions from both the father and mother. Short answer, it is possible.
Not that I know of, get your mother, father or carer to look at it.
Short answer: genetics. For more information, see the related questions.
It would depend on the dominant gene: I would compare the mother's parents eyelashes to the father's parents eyelashes, for each of the parent's eyelashes that are long it is an increase in 25% that the offspring will have long eyelashes. Unless half of the father's parents have long lashes then that shows the short lash gene is dominant.
She was 5 feet tall (Quite Short)