Well I am Maltese and I always called my grandmother Nana because that is how you say it in Maltese !
There will be absolutely no problem and your child will have blood group "AB+".
SIDS is not the same as apnea. Many people have apnea and apnea has killed infants. Infants with apnea can be resuscitated. An apnea monitor (AKA cot monitor) can detect when a SIDS victim stops breathing � but remember, a SIDS victim is already dead when that happens. Note: Infants with apnea usually are placed on apnea monitors for apnea, not to prevent the unpreventable. And many SIDS parents do use apnea monitors on subsequent children � this has mainly a placebo effect on the parents. No, they are not. You can revive a baby that has apnea if it is not too late. A SIDS baby you can't revive. SIDS is undetectable and you never know when it will hit. With apnea a baby can stop breathing and start again. SIDS is totally different.
Yes if both have the same blood group , the child at birth will have trouble.
The daughter of a niece is typically a grandniece. If you are referring to the granddaughter of a niece, she would also be considered a grandniece. Therefore, the daughter of a niece and the granddaughter of a niece are essentially the same person, both referred to as a grandniece.
no because they are in the same family as you
Your child and your nephew are first cousins. Your granddaughter and your great nephew are second cousins. Your granddaughter and your great great nephew are second cousins once removed
oldebarn = great grandchildthere isn't a word for granddaughter or grandson - both are refereed to as 'barnebarn' = grandchild (same goes with 'great ...' -but it's "oldebarn")
There is no law. The problem with co-sleeping can be a problem with the adult over laying the child and smothering. The other problem is sexual. It is never good to allow a child to sleep in a bed with an adult or the same room. You just have to use good sense.
It is not recommended to sleep with a newborn in the same bed due to the risk of suffocation or Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). It is safer for the baby to sleep in a separate crib or bassinet in the same room as the parents.
I do believe that 18 month old babies can die from SIDS- I think that the medical community now refers to it as SUDS or SUDC Sudden Unexplained Death of a Child. My son died from SIDS at 2 months 4 days and in the 2 years since then I have met many other families going through my nightmare and one lost a 3 year old to SIDS/SUDC so yes, it can happen to toddlers and older- it's just less common. Yes, children can die from SIDS at 18 months old. I know of a case where the child was almost two years old (22 months). They still had the same autopsy reports and were unexplained deaths, "SIDS". It is very rare , but unfortunately can still happen. on Thursday august 11th my husband and I put are son to bed who was 18 months and 25 days and when we checked on him before we went to go to bed he was already gone he had just laid down an hour before that my husband and I have replayed that night a thousand times and we have to settle for the reason they gave us which was sids.
well you have to know what does the child want and give it to him/her on her birthday im only 9 but my friend James has the same problem to me and you to so do this or its the worst birthday of your child's life!