b and o
No. For a child to be born with AB blood, one parent would have to have A blood and the other B, or either can have AB and the other A or B.
No - children do not have to have the same blood type as the parents. For example, if one parent has blood type A and the other has blood type AB, the child might have A, B or AB blood types. (For the child to have B, the parent with blood type A would need to be heterozygous, Ao)
No, the blood types a and b are dominant alleles and would mask the recessive o blood type.
No, the blood types a and b are dominant alleles and would mask the recessive o blood type.
b posgative
The other parent would have to have blood type O to have a child with that blood type.
Colorblindness is not determined by blood type. Everyone has two alleles for blood type: A, B, or O. If one parent is AO and the other is BO, the child can be AB, AO, BO, or OO.
At least one parent would have to have an RH Positive blood type. Beyond that you can not tell. Because the O trait is a recessive trait, either parent could have A or B or O blood, since, for example, a parent with A blood could have one A gene and one O gene that together would express the A trait. That parent's child could inherit either the A gene or the O gene. The other parent could have B based upon one B gene and one O gene that together would express the B trait. That other parent's child could inherit either the B gene or the O gene. Only if the child of both parents inherited an O gene from each parent, would the child have O blood. As to the RH factor, it is a dominant trait, so that if the child has the trait expressed, it would have to have been in one of the two parents. Hope this helps.
No, At least one parent would have to be an A (or an AB) for a child to have group A blood.
A,B,AB or O. The +\- would depend on the parents rh factors
We would discuss it with the other parent. The parent has the right to know.
Your parent would file for child support from the other parent and you would be living with them.