NO
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type A neg --can be AA or AO with Rh (--) = contributes A, O, (-)Father type O pos --can only be OO with Rh (++), (+-) = contributes O, (+), (-)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type A pos/negBaby is type OO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type O pos/negYES, these parents could produce a Type A positive child.
You can physically give blood while having mononucleosis, however during normal blood screening procedure your blood would be rejected. Mononucleosis is due to the Epstein Bar Virus which infects B cells in your blood. Therefore it can be transmitted through blood transfusion and blood infected with mononucleosis is rejected by blood banks.
Adults have eight premolar teeth. They also have eight fingers (and two thumbs).
fetal hemoglobinsFirst, let me point out that there are 32 blood-group systems identified in the human. Each of these can affect the outcome of a cross-match for a blood transfusion. However, it would be too confusing to identify yourself as a 32 part blood type, so we limit it to the two most important antigens/genes which are the ABO gene and Rh factor.The usually identified blood types are:phenotye: Type A pos = genotype: AA or AO with Rh factor (++) or (+-)phenotye: Type A neg= genotype: AA or AO with Rh factor (--)phenotye: Type B pos = genotype: BB or AO with Rh factor (++) or (+-)phenotye: Type B neg = genotype: BB or AO with Rh factor (--)phenotye: Type O pos = genotype: OO with Rh factor (++) or (+-)phenotye: Type O neg = genotype: OO with Rh factor (--)phenotye: Type AB pos = genotype: AB with Rh factor (++) or (+-)phenotye: Type AB neg = genotype: AB with Rh factor (--)Therefore, there are 4 ABO blood types combined with 2 Rh factors, for a total of 8 blood types that can easily be identified with a blood mixing kit.
The mom must have blood type B. Blood type o is recessive and types A and B are codominant with the heterozygous condition (one A gene and one B) resulting in the blood type AB. Both genes must be type O for that type O to appear.
You hook them in parallel pos to pos and neg to neg.
in parallel pos to pos neg to neg might want to use an isolator
It depends on how much voltage you want/need. If you want 12 volts total then hook the 6 volt batteries together by connecting one pos to the others neg. Then put the remaining pos and neg to what you need. You can add the 12 volt with these by connecting it directly to the use. If you want 24 volts then just go pos to use neg to pos on next battery to neg to pos on next battery then neg to use
No. Two Rh positive parents can have an Rh negative child. A parent with blood type O lacks the A antigen; a parent with blood type B also lacks the A antigen; therefore they cannot have a child together with blood type A.
The answer is the normal quotient except negative. Pos X neg = neg
hook both pos on one side and both neg on tha other
We are looking for the possible blood types of a baby.Parental information:Mother type A neg --can be AA or AO with Rh (--) = contributes A, O, (-)Father type O pos --can only be OO with Rh (++), (+-) = contributes O, (+), (-)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Baby is type AO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type A pos/negBaby is type OO with Rh (+-) or (--) = Type O pos/negYES, these parents could produce a Type A positive child.
We are looking for the possible blood types of a MOTHER.Available information:Father type O pos -- can only be OO with Rh (++) or (+-)Genes: O, (+), (-)Baby type O neg -- can only be OO with Rh (--)Baby receives one gene from each parent: Mother must contribute an O and Rh (-)Blood type AO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type BO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)Blood type OO with Rh pos (+-) or neg (--)With the father contributing an O and (-) gene, the mother mus contribute the other O and (-); therefore the mother can be Type A pos/neg, Type B pos/neg or Type O pos/neg, with Type O neg being the best case of getting the O neg baby.
when you hook two batteries together and keep the same voltage by connecting the POS post of batt #1 to POS post of batt #2 and the NEG post of batt #1 to the NEG post of batt #2. this will give you 12 volts of power for a longer duration.
The child will probably be positive, but they can be negative. Each parent has two genes for pos/neg blood type. The parent will have positive blood type if at least one of their genes is positive, but they could both also have negative genes to pass on to the child.
Yes. Each person has two genes to make up their blood group and rhesus group, one from each parent. For blood groups, groups A and B are dominant over O, and for rhesus groups positive is dominant over negative. If you have one of each, your type will be whichever the dominant one is. Firstly looking at the blood group - an O group child can be born to group B parents if both the mother's and father's blood group genotype is BO. The child has a 25% chance of being BB (group B), 50% chance of being BO (group B) and 25% chance of being OO (group O). Looking at the rhesus group - mother's genotype must be Neg/Neg, father could be pos/pos, in which case the child will always be rhesus positive, or pos/neg where the child has a 50% chance of being rhesus positive, and 50% chance of being rhesus negative.
6 and -4, because a neg. times a pos. equals a neg. (in this case 6*(-4)= -24) and when adding and subtracting integers you subtract the smaller number from the larger number, in the case 6 and 4, which is 2