Definitely. One Rh positive parent is at least 50% likely to produce Rh positive offspring.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.
Given that the mother's DNA is A and the child is A positive, the father's DNA must also contain the A antigen. The father could be A positive, A negative, AB positive, or AB negative.
yes
The father's blood type could be either A positive or A negative. The children inherited the A antigen from the father, resulting in their blood type as A negative. The Rh factor (positive or negative) is inherited separately, so the father could be either positive or negative.
it could be a- or ab+
yes, the mother could o negative
mother could be either B or AB and she could also be Negative or Positive.
No, the child could only be O+ or O-.
It's called "positive" and "negative" - yes the "A" father and "B" mother can each give a gene to produce "AB"; The Rhesus gene is either positive or negative so the baby could get either.
father blood type could be (A,B, or O) positive.
Yes. The mother would have to have a heterozygous Rh genotype, so that she could pass on an Rh negative allele to her offspring.
father could be A positive, B positive, or O positive... i cud be more specific if i knew the his parents blood type