Yes. The child will be either A positive or B positive or even AB positive. If the grandparents have a negative (A negative, B negative), there is a slight chance that the child will have a negative. A type O is out of the question. The fact that there are two positive parents means that there is no risk to the mother of Rh negative disorders.
Yes, it is possible for two parents with blood type B positive to have a child with blood type AB positive. This is because the child can inherit one B allele from each parent to make blood type AB.
No, two parents with O type blood cannot have a child with B type blood. This is because O is recessive - meaning in order to have type O blood, you need to have two O alleles. Therefore if both parents have O blood, all their children have to have O type blood. In order to have a child with B type blood, at least one parent needs to have B or AB type blood - in order to donate the B allele to the child.
Yes, it is possible for parents with blood types B positive and O positive to have a child with blood type B negative. This can occur if the parents are both carriers of the negative Rh factor and pass it on to the child.
Yes, it is possible for parents with O positive and B positive blood groups to have a child with either O positive or B positive blood group, as each parent can pass on either their O or B allele to their offspring.
yes
Another has said: no chance. One of the parents must be b positive.
Yes, it is possible for two parents with blood type B positive to have a child with blood type AB positive. This is because the child can inherit one B allele from each parent to make blood type AB.
No, two parents with O type blood cannot have a child with B type blood. This is because O is recessive - meaning in order to have type O blood, you need to have two O alleles. Therefore if both parents have O blood, all their children have to have O type blood. In order to have a child with B type blood, at least one parent needs to have B or AB type blood - in order to donate the B allele to the child.
Yes, two B positives can produce an O positive child.
If both parents are B- they can only have children who are B- and O-. One would have to be positive in order to have a child with positive blood.
more than 99% the child will o or B positive .
Yes, it is possible for parents with blood types B positive and O positive to have a child with blood type B negative. This can occur if the parents are both carriers of the negative Rh factor and pass it on to the child.
Yes, it is possible for parents with O positive and B positive blood groups to have a child with either O positive or B positive blood group, as each parent can pass on either their O or B allele to their offspring.
Yes. They can have B+, B-, O+, and O-.
No, there is no risk at all.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
Yes. Blood types do not make parents incompatible.