yes
A baby can be any blood type that is possible through the combination of the parents' genetic material. In this case, the baby could be blood type B positive like the parents, or it could be blood type O positive if both parents are carriers of the O blood type gene.
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.
Yes, if the mother is positive she can have a negative baby with no problems for her since usually mother and child's bloo do not mix while in the womb. During birth however, if the mother's blood comes into contact with the baby's it could incur an immune response in the baby, who has anti-A coagulation facotors. If the mother is negative with a positive baby then the situation because tricker, especially during a second pregnancy with a positive child if her immune system already came into contact with the first baby's blood.
The baby can have either A positive or O positive blood type.
The baby could be either B positive or O positive. The baby's blood type is determined by the combination of genes from the mother and father. Since the father's blood type is O positive, the baby has a chance of inheriting either B or O from the mother.
can an o positive and an o negative make an a positive baby
Nope, the baby will be O positive as well.
No. There's a small chance the baby will be O negative--if both parents have an Rh negative (recessive) allele, and the baby inherits this allele from both parents, the baby would be Rh negative. But if the baby inherits the Rh positive allele from either parent, the baby will be Rh positive.
No. Two negatives can't make a positive.
A person with A positive blood may be a carrier for O negative blood. If the other parent is also a carrier of those traits, the baby could be O negative.
no
the baby may be A or O.
sometimes
yes
No
Negative is recessive...you can have a negative also.
No