Being O (positive or negative --> Rh factor is not a component of ABO blood typing, it's separate) gives your parents 6 combinations of blood types. When a person is simply A or B (never AB) they still have the possibility of still having an O child. Type A and Type B only carry one set of antigens (A antigen or B antigen), as opposed to Type AB which carries both A AND B antigens. If you're not in the medical field or studying genetics, then to simplify it, think of it as if on the other side of a parent's A or B is an O. Therefore, a person with Type A blood could be thought of as having AO blood - thus remaining the ability to have an Type O child. It is much more complicated than that, of course but if you put it simplistically into a Punnett square with that previous description you see how two non-O parents can have an O child.
Because you're O... your parents are one of the following combinations.
Parent 1: B
Parent 2: B,
Parent 1: A
Parent 2: B,
Parent 1: A
Parent 2: A,
Parent 1: O
Parent 2: A,
Parent 1: O
Parent 2: B,
Parent 1: O
Parent 2: O.
They would be either B or O, but whether rhesus-positive or -negative is impossible to say (although more likely -positive).
No, he does not. Unlike sperm, the alleles for bloodtype can be the same in both parents and therefore the combination of a man and woman's bloodtype will determine their children's.
Yes, bloodtype is not directly hereditary.
No. A kid has to have the bloodtype of its mother or father.
It depends on the genotype of the parents: If they are AO and AO the child could be all of the 2 Bloodtypes: AO (= bloodtype A) OO (= bloodtype O) If they are AA and AA the child could only be bloodtype A The answer in short: yes!
If both parents are O- then the child will be O-.
father's blood group AB+ve and Mother's is O+ve, If there any chance to have a Opositive baby
If both parents are type O, they will always produce type O offspring.
No, a person's blood type remains the same throughout his life. The bloodtype is determined by the genes we inherit from our parents.
Parents are completely responsible for their children's wellbeing, so it's parents to children.
A family describes parents and children.
the parents have problem children
Children live by the example that their parents set. If their parents engage in bad behavior, their children will think this is how they are supposed to act.