Your children might or might not get schizophrenia if your sister and mother have it. There is no guarantee either way.
Your sister-in-law may be the sister of your spouse. In that case, her sister is either your spouse and the mother of your children, or she is another sister of your spouse and your kids aunt. Your sister-in-law may also be the wife of your brother. In that case her sister is not related to you or your children.
two kids i dont know there name or who the mother is
She had a brother, Lazar, and a sister, Aga.
No.
The chances of someone whose aunt is schizophrenic developing schizophrenia is 4 percent, which is higher than normal (the chance for someone without a schizophrenic relative is 1.1 percent), but not very high.
Yes, a half sister is also a step sister. Wrong. If your mother or father had a child with another person, it'd be your half brother/sister. If your mother or father got married to someone with kids, it'd be your step sister.
Sally Hemings - Jefferson's slave and his wife's half sister
No. An Uncle is the brother of either your Mother or Father. You're kids may call him 'uncle'
No. An Uncle is the brother of either your Mother or Father. You're kids may call him 'uncle'
You didn't say how the life estate was granted. If it is in a will it won't apply until the mother dies and the gift can be changed at any point up to that time. But you did say "3 kids own the farm" which could imply that there is a deed to the three kids with a life estate to the mother. If it is in a deed, then it can't be "revoked" without permission of the owners - the three kids. If one of the sisters has died, then that portion goes to the heirs of that sister, again encumbered with the life estate of the mother.
His Sister's Kids was created on 1913-12-20.
Population statistics on the heredity of schizophrenia estimate that a child with one diagnosed parent has about a 10% genetic risk of developing the disease themselves (this is compared to a 1% risk in the general population). The risk goes up significantly if both parents (60%), a grandparent, or other close relatives also have schizophrenia.