AB negative is a RH negative blood type.
yes
The child will be A or B or AB, Rh+ or Rh- . So yes, the child can be A-.
AB, Rh negative recipients may be transfused AB, Rh negative whole blood (rarely used in modern transfusion medicine), any ABO, Rh negative red cells, any ABO, Rh negative platelets (with volume reduction of residual incompatible plasma if the requesting physician is concerned) and only AB fresh frozen plasma. Rh positive cellular blood products may be give to an AB negative recipient IF there are no available Rh negative components, immediate transfusion is required AND there is no preexisting Anti-D (RH) antibodies present in the patients plasma.
A, B, or AB, positive or negative
He is B negative.
A, B, AB, and O each one can be negative or positive ex. A Rh positive A Rh negative
Triple A+
No. If both parents are A negative the child can only be A negative or O negative. If the child is AB positive at least one parent must have type B or AB blood and at least one must be RH positive.
My daughter is AB negative , I am B positive and her dad it A negative
It depends what you define as "Blood". Type AB, Rh positive recipients may receive whole blood (rarely used in modern transfusion medicine) from AB, Rh positive or negative donors. They may also (generally) receive red cell transfusions from any ABO and Rh blood type. They may receive platelets from any ABO, Rh donor type, but may require removal of residual incompatible plasma from the platelet product prior to infusion. An AB patient may only receive AB plasma. AB negative recipients may receive whole blood from an AB, Rh negative donor, red cells from any ABO, Rh negative donor, platelets from any ABO, Rh negative donor (with possible plasma reduction), and only AB plasma. Concerning the transfusion of Rh positive cellular components to Rh negative recipients; ABO compatible, Rh positive red cells may be transfused to Rh negative patients IF there are no compatible, Rh negative products available, transfusion cannot wait for units to be imported, anti-D antibodies are not present in the patient's plasma and the patient is a male, or a female of non-child bearing age.
Their offspring can have blood type O positive or O negative because the O gene is recessive, while the A and B genes are dominant. The positive/negative factor refers to the presence or absence of the Rh antigen, which is independent of the ABO blood type system.
Rhesus negative is one of the major two variants in blood typing (the other obviously being Rh positive). For example, people refer to themselves as "A+", "O-" or "AB-". There is nothing wrong with having it.