A,B,AB or O. The +\- would depend on the parents rh factors
yes they can..... positive and negetive blood group depends upon Rh factor and it is nothing to do with incomplete dominance of blood group.
A/O, B/O, or O/O any combination. Each parent contributes one gene, A and B are dominant, so any combination that could result in O/O would result in a child with O blood. The Rh factor is similar. Rh positive is dominant, so the child would have to inherit 2 negative genes to be Rh negative. Each parent contributes 1 of the 2 he/she carries. Almost any blood type can result in a child with Rh + blood. +/+ or +/-. The child would have to inherit the - gene from BOTH parents (they would both have to be +/- or -/-) in order to be Rh negative. If both parents are Rh-, the child would be Rh-, otherwise it is hard to predict. Even if both parents are Rh+, it is possible for the child to be negative if both carry the recessive negative gene.
because the dad blood was stronger and one positive and one negative make a positive
No, an O-group set of parents can never have children with blood that is not also O-group. They lack the necessary B allele.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
Yes, either parent may have had a parent which carried the B antigen blood group gene. A parent that has A+ blood may also carry a dormant -RH (Rhesus monkey) gene inherited from a parent. Should the other parent have neg. RH blood type, a child may be born with B+ or B- RH blood type. In short; you need to know the blood group of the child parents & grandparents to determine whether B antigen blood group may or may not be excluded as a possibility.
yes. If one parent has blood group A (as in genotype AO) and the other has blood group B (as in genotype BO) can have a child with blood group O
The short answer is YES. To explain as simply as possible; Each of us inherits a set of genes from each parent, a set of alleles from each parent; in the case of blood type, the alleles that may be present at the site on the chromosome responsible for blood type may be either A,B, or O (O actually being the absence of A or B). In the above question, if one parent's alleles are A and O (remember, everyone has two alleles), their blood type is A; if the other parent's alleles are B and O, that parent types as B. If their child inherits the "O" allele from each parent, that child will be type O.
A + ; A - ; Ab + ; Ab -; O- ; Any ONE parent may carry these, taking into account the possible masks of the target group
No
No, At least one parent would have to be an A (or an AB) for a child to have group A blood.
No. Only 1 allele each can be passed down from each parent, so it is impossible for the child to have 2 dominant alleles if 1 parent has blood group 0.
yes, the other parent could be: A+, A-, AB+, or AB-
Yes it is possible. The child can have A, B and O blood group.
yeah its possible.
We get our blood group from either parent or even grandparents so it is possible.
Answer Mostly with Parent's groupes.