in science the positive blood type has two Geno-types :
Rh+ Rh- or Rh+Rh+
and the negative blood type has only one Geno-type :
Rh- Rh-
there are 3 possibilities :
Rh + Rh- X Rh - Rh- 50% of kids will be Rh+ 50% will be Rh-
Rh+ Rh+ X Rh - Rh- 100% of kids will be Rh+
Rh+ Rh- x Rh+ Rh- either possibility exists in theory 25% could be Rh -
The baby has a three-quarter chance of being A and a quarter chance of being O, and is very likely to be 'positive'.
50 percent chance that the baby will be O and 50 percent chance it will be A.
yes, if the mother is either A positive or AB positive.
The baby may be any of the following: * B positive * B negative * O positive * O negative
No. For a person to be "O" blood type, they have a phenotype of O, which can only come about if they have a genotype of OO. If both mother and father are O's then they have no B that they can donate to the baby.
It is actually better if you have the same blood group.
The genotype of the man is A negative/O negative inheriting the A neg from his mother and O negative from his father. [Father's genotype is B positive/O negative. Mother's genotype is B positive/A negative.]
Yes, a father with A negative blood can have a child with A positive blood. If he does, the mother must have a positive Rh factor, and the mother's blood type may be any of the possibilities.
No.
yes.
B positive or negative or, O positive or negative.
Yes, a mother with negative and a father with O positive can have a baby with B positive. If they do, the mother must have blood type B or AB.
yes
No. Rh negative is a recessive gene. Positive people do not carry it.
95% not.
I'm not sure how negative or positive is determined, but a B mother and O father can have a B child.
yes
No
No, because a baby gets their blood from their father, not their mother.