Apparently if the newborn baby, for whatever reason, is given a blood transfusion at birth, this can alter the babies blood type.
yes from your parents
No, not precisely, its mainly got to do with your biological parents genes. You inherit some things from your father, and mainly other things from your mother.
Like eye color, or blood type, you inherit from parents. douce
If your parents are A negative and B positive, you could have blood type A or B, as you inherit one blood type allele from each parent. The Rh factor (positive or negative) would depend on whether you inherit the Rh allele from your B positive parent.
Not necessarily. Your blood type is determined by the combination of alleles you inherit from your parents, but it's not as simple as just inheriting the negative Rh factor. Depending on the specific alleles you inherit, you could end up with a positive blood type even if both parents are negative.
both is not a good term . but both parents are included in determining that
There is no personality correlation with blood type. They blood type you have are as a result of the pairing of your parents, and you may inherit some of their traits, but it is not blood that determines them.
Your blood type is inherited or given to you by your parents. The combinations of different blood types yields different blood types. In fact this is how paternity was once determined.
You could be blood type B or O, as you inherit one blood type allele from each parent. If you inherit a B allele from your mother and an O allele from your father, you would be blood type B. If you inherit an O allele from both parents, you would be blood type O.
Only if it was adopted...the only options for that child's blood type would be A or O if the biological parents are both Type A.
No - this is not possible. The baby must inherit the B allele from one of it's parents - but neither of these parents have one. The only possibilities with these parents are blood type A or O, depending on whether the parent with A-type blood is heterozygous, AO, or homozygous, AA.
NO. The alleles that lead to "O-type" blood are recessive to the alleles that lead to "A-type" blood and the child would have to inherit this "A" from one of his/her parents. Given that both parents are "O", there is nobody to inherit the "A" from. (This issue also presents with the exclusive RH- in the parents and RH+ in the child, because RH+ is dominant over the recessive RH-.)