It depends on both parents blood groups!
Your husband could be:AA (AA, AB)AO (AA, AB, AO, BO)AB (AA, AB, BB)OO (AO, BO)BO (AB, BB, BO, AO)Any of the above combinations could result in your daughter showing as "A" blood type, all possible combinations are shown with the "A" karyotype in bold).
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. A parent either passes their type or the parent doesn't. In your case, your type is B, and you didn't pass this type to your child. The mother doesn't have either the A or the B type. The same goes with the RH.
Yes. If the mother and father both carry O blood type it will be hidden by their A and B blood types. The same goes for the Rh factor the negative can still be carried by the parents but again will be hidden. They can pass these genes to their children.
Not necessarily. While a child may inherit their blood type from their father, it is not guaranteed. Blood type is determined by genes inherited from both parents, so it is possible for a child to have a different blood type than their father.
AO which is the same as A
Blood types are received from the mother and father, so the child can be the same type as the mother if the father's type allows it.
Your husband could be:AA (AA, AB)AO (AA, AB, AO, BO)AB (AA, AB, BB)OO (AO, BO)BO (AB, BB, BO, AO)Any of the above combinations could result in your daughter showing as "A" blood type, all possible combinations are shown with the "A" karyotype in bold).
Yes. You can also tell by a sample of saliva.
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.
it could be.
Yes, blood types are an example of codominance So the father can be A i and the mother can be A i, giving a 25% chance of getting an O blood type (i i). The same can be said for the Rh antigen
If their mother and father had different Rhesus factors, yes.
there are no other kinds of blood types in the world just the same as what we have here in america.
It Depends. Not every daughter father relationship is the same. There are daughters who hate their father. And their are some who love them because there he onlyones there for them. Everybody's different.
Yes. A parent either passes their type or the parent doesn't. In your case, your type is B, and you didn't pass this type to your child. The mother doesn't have either the A or the B type. The same goes with the RH.
Blood types are not dependent on race so if their blood types are the same when they are tested it would be fine.