Yes, it is possible for a person with blood type A and a person with blood type B to have a child with blood type O.
Yes, a man with blood type B and a woman with blood type AB can have a child with blood type B. The child would inherit one allele for blood type B from the father and either an A or B allele from the mother. The child's blood type could be either B or AB.
Yes. If you transfuse type B blood into a type A person there will be agglutination because the type A person naturally makes anti-B antibodies. The converse is also true. If you transfuse type A blood into a type B person there will be agglutination because the type B person naturally makes anti-A antibodies.
Yes, it is possible for a father with blood type A and a mother with blood type O to have a child with blood type B. The child would have inherited one allele from each parent, resulting in the combination for blood type B.
Yes, the father with blood type B+ could be the biological father of a child with blood type A+. A child can inherit a different blood type from their parents due to genetic inheritance involving multiple alleles for the ABO blood group system.
No. It is not possible for a child to have A if the parents are O blood type. If both parents have type O blood, then their children will also have type O blood. However, two parents with type A or type B blood (both the same or one of each) can sometimes have a child with type O blood. That is because the gene for type O blood is recessive. But they must carry the O type. However, two parents with type AB blood can have a child with type A, type B, or type AB blood, but cannot have a child with type O blood.
The child will most likely be type B (genotype BO), however if the B parent is type BO, the child may be type O.
Yes, a man with blood type B and a woman with blood type AB can have a child with blood type B. The child would inherit one allele for blood type B from the father and either an A or B allele from the mother. The child's blood type could be either B or AB.
Yes, the child's blood type can be B if the father has o.
Yes. There are two possible genotypes for a person with type B blood: BB or BO. If a person with the BB genotype has children with a person with type O blood, then all of their children will have type B blood. But, it the person has the BO genotype, then any child they have will have a 50% chance of having type O blood.
If two people with Type B blood have a child, the child will either be Type B or Type O.
Yes! You could produce a child with either A or B blood.
Yes. If you transfuse type B blood into a type A person there will be agglutination because the type A person naturally makes anti-B antibodies. The converse is also true. If you transfuse type A blood into a type B person there will be agglutination because the type B person naturally makes anti-A antibodies.
If they both have type A blood, they cannot have a child type B.
No. The child will be type B or O, it cannot be type A.
The parents must have both blood type B or blood type 0 and B.
a person with O+/- blood can only receive O+/- blood respectively. O+ can give blood to any other + blood type, and O- can give blood to anyone.
No. B type can only have B, O, and AB. A child with A blood would have to have at least one parent be A or AB.