my guess would be that the child would still appear to be racially mixed, but a lighter shade of the "black and white" skin tone.
black
John was the offspring of his mother and father. The offspring of the white cat and the black cat is a grey cat.
I'm trying to figure out exactly what you're asking here. Technically, if one of the parents is of mixed race, then the child is as well. Might the child have a noticeably darker complexion than either of its parents? Certainly. However, if the mother is very light in color, the father is white, and the child is extremely dark... I'd say a paternity test is possibly in order. Once the races are "mixed" there is no way to have a pure-blood child. The child gets its genes from both parents - the only way to have a "black" child would be from two pure "black" parents. Although if your family has lived in America for more than a few generations, you're not a pure "black" anyway because we are a country that interbreeds a lot between races. There are almost no pure races in America except those who just moved here.
Both parents must be carriers of the recessive "albinism" gene. For people who do not have albinism, there is only a 1 in 100 chance that they are carriers of the recessive gene. If both parents are normally pigmented, that is, neither one of them has albinism, but they both happen to be carriers of the recessive "albinism" gene. Then there is a 1 in 4 chance they will have a child with albinism each time they concieve. One person in 17,000 in the U.S.A. has some type of albinism.
Slim to none. But if you're that worried about something as trivial as what color your baby will turn out perhaps you shouldn't even be marrying this person.
The child is biracial or multiracial. It would be silly to suggest that the product of two races mixing would be one of those two races and not the other. Forget anything you've heard about "race passing from the mother." That is obviously not accurate. There are many famous people who have a black father and a white mother. Barack Obama, Tim Duncan, the rapper Drake, Alicia Keys, Halle Berry and many others. Commonly, these people are referred to as black, but that is only one half of their ancestry. Realistically, they are neither black nor white; they are both. In practice, unless they have especially light skin or ambiguous features, they will probably be considered black by society. Mariah Carey has a black father and a white mother, but she is almost never considered black.
It depends...due to DNA...
no because the black mom could have had the child before she married the white man
A black mother will have a child who at the very least will be 50% black.
i think they are called half cast
he can be white or light brown
White
From the information on an interview on CBS, his father is black and his mother is white.
Mulatto or bi-racial. They normally affiliate themselves with blacks.
His father is black and his mother is white.
no, her mother is African American and her father is Italian American
Depends on what the other parent is. If the mulatto parent was half black and half white, the child would be 25% black, 25% white, and 50% whatever the other parent is.
he is mixed... his mother is white and his father is black.