Assuming your parents are I(a)I(a) and I(b)I(b) Baby will be I(a)I(b) AB blood If any of the parents are I(a)i or I(b)i Chances are they can be A, B or O Has to do with dominant and recessive genes.
The baby can be born with either. My father is Type A and my mother is O. I'm A, and my brother is O. It is possible that it will complicate the pregnancy though. The baby can be born with either. My father is Type A and my mother is O. I'm A, and my brother is O. It is possible that it will complicate the pregnancy though.
No.
Yes
Yes.
Not necessarily. The blood type of a first born baby can be the same as the mother's, but it can also be different if the baby inherits a different blood type allele from the father. The baby's blood type is determined by a combination of the parents' blood types.
YES!
Yes, a child of those parents can be born with blood type A or B.
Yes. The father's blood type must be oo. The mother's blood type could either be Ao or AA (both of these are blood type A). If the mothers blood type is Ao, she could give the o gene to the baby, resulting in the baby being type oo (or type o). (In order to have blood type o, you must have an o from your mother and an o from your father.)
A baby with O blood type can be born to a mother with AB blood type and a father with B blood type if the mother is a carrier of the O blood type allele from a parent and passes it on to the baby. The baby inherits one O allele from the mother and one B allele from the father, resulting in O blood type.
yes cause my son ia a- and his dad is o+ and im a_
Yes. The baby will have either blood type O+ or A+ (I'm assuming you're referring to positive when you say dominant)
None. What you have to worry about is if the mother's blood type is (-) negative and the father's is (+)positive. When this happens, the baby inside the mother will be (+) and the mother will make antibodies to the baby's blood for the first pregnancy. This will not affect the firstborn, but will affect the second born. This is why they give Rh - moms a shot of Rhogam to keep the mothers antibodies from attacking the baby's bloodcells resulting in anemia.