If you really want to know you should ask your parents. right? i have no clue what you are saying anyways
The American Red Cross website is a great reference for blood types. The American Red Cross can give you very detailed information on all blood types.
To study specific blood types on your own visit centers like the American red cross. They would be the most knowledgeable place to get the best information. visit a facility or go to the website.
Your parents determine your blood type. Your blood type is a cross of two alleles from the parent, one from each parent. Your parents could either give you AA, AO, AB, BB, BO or OO alleles, depending on which two alleles that they have.
Parental blood types play a significant role in determining the blood type of their children. The blood type of a child is determined by the combination of blood types from both parents. Each parent contributes one allele, which can be either A, B, or O, to their child's blood type. The child's blood type is determined by the combination of these alleles, following specific inheritance patterns.
The possible blood types for their children are A positive or O positive. The child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so they can receive either the A allele from the A positive parent or the O allele from the O positive parent.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
Blood types are determined by specific antigens on the surface of red blood cells, which are inherited from parents. ABO blood group is determined by a person's genotypes at the ABO locus on chromosome 9. The inheritance of blood types follows Mendelian genetics, with the A, B, and O alleles determining the blood type.
No - children do not have to have the same blood type as the parents. For example, if one parent has blood type A and the other has blood type AB, the child might have A, B or AB blood types. (For the child to have B, the parent with blood type A would need to be heterozygous, Ao)
Yes. parent with B and a parent with O blood traits can have the following blood types in their children : B, O, BO
No, in this scenario the possible blood types for the children are A- and B-. Positive refers to the presence of Rh factor in the blood. The Rh factor has to come from somewhere.
Without any further information about the blood types of the offspring's parents, you can say that the offspring of a parent with type A and parent of type B could have any blood type -- A, B, O, or AB.
All blood types are usually taken by the American Red Cross. It is possible that they have an excess of certian types, and are looking for the others.