Parents may appear negative due to various factors, such as stress from work, financial burdens, or personal experiences that shape their outlook. Their upbringing and life challenges can also influence how they perceive the world. Additionally, they might express concern for their children's future, which can come off as negativity. Understanding their perspective can help foster better communication and empathy.
a negative times a negative is a positive so the answer is positive
Yes, two parents with negative blood factors (e.g. O-) can have a child with a negative blood factor (e.g. O-). Blood type inheritance follows specific patterns, so it is possible for two negative blood factor parents to pass on the negative factor to their child.
yes i think so.
If both parents are O negative, the child can only be O negative, so the mother and child will have the same blood type and there won't be any problem because of that.
Yes, it is possible for parents with O blood type to have an O negative child if both parents are carriers of the Rh negative factor. The child inherits one gene from each parent, so there is a chance for the child to be O negative if both parents pass on the Rh negative gene.
I'll wait for you to ask the question. Positive parents can have a negative baby as positive is dominant so they may both have one positive and one negative gene and the baby gets the two negative genes.
No. Two rhesus-negative parents cannot have a rhesus-positive child.
It is possible as the Rhesus factor is a dominant trait. So, even if the parents have only one allele for the factor, there is a 1/4th chance that the child could get neither allele from the parents and end up as O negative.
If both parents are O negative, their child will also be O negative. This is because O negative is a recessive blood type that requires both parents to contribute an O negative allele for the child to have O negative blood type.
Each person carries two bits of rh imformation, called alleles, and each can be positive or negative. A person is rh+ if they have at least one positive allele. Only if both their alleles are negative are they considered as rh-. When two parents have a baby, they each pass one allele on. So if both parent has one positive and one negative allele, and both passed on their negative allele to their baby, then the baby would be rh negative. The chances of two rh positive parents having a rh negative baby are about 18%.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
No. If both parents are positive, the child will be positive. If both parents are negative, the child will be negative. Parents who are negative and positive can have children who are either positive or negative. '+' + '+' = '+' '-' + '-' = '-' '+' + '-' = '-' or '+'