AO positive is the only possible blood type.
Yes, it is possible for a child to have O positive blood type if one parent is O positive and the other parent is A positive. The child could inherit the O allele from the O positive parent and the A allele from the A positive parent.
No, it is not possible for parents with blood types B negative and O positive to have a child with AB positive blood type. The AB blood type requires an A allele from one parent and a B allele from the other, which is not possible in this case.
Yes, it is possible for two parents with O positive blood type to have a child with A positive blood type. The child can inherit the A allele from one parent and the positive allele from the other parent. The A allele is dominant over the O allele, so the child would have A positive blood type.
No, it is not possible for a child to have B negative blood type if one parent is O positive and the other is A positive. Blood type inheritance follows specific rules, and in this case, the child would inherit either O or A positive blood type.
If one parent is O positive and the other is AB negative, the child could inherit the A allele from the O positive parent and the Rh factor from the AB negative parent, resulting in the child being A positive. Each parent passes on one allele for blood type and one allele for Rh factor, so different combinations are possible.
The blood type would be A positive.
Yes, it is possible for a child to have O positive blood type if one parent is O positive and the other parent is A positive. The child could inherit the O allele from the O positive parent and the A allele from the A positive parent.
A B+ parent can have a child with A+ blood. The other parent must be type A or type AB for this to occur.
No, it is not possible for parents with blood types B negative and O positive to have a child with AB positive blood type. The AB blood type requires an A allele from one parent and a B allele from the other, which is not possible in this case.
Yes, it is possible for two parents with O positive blood type to have a child with A positive blood type. The child can inherit the A allele from one parent and the positive allele from the other parent. The A allele is dominant over the O allele, so the child would have A positive blood type.
Yes that is entirely possible. It just means that each of you carry the recessive gene for rh and it matched up.
No, it is not possible for a child to have B negative blood type if one parent is O positive and the other is A positive. Blood type inheritance follows specific rules, and in this case, the child would inherit either O or A positive blood type.
If one parent is O positive and the other is AB negative, the child could inherit the A allele from the O positive parent and the Rh factor from the AB negative parent, resulting in the child being A positive. Each parent passes on one allele for blood type and one allele for Rh factor, so different combinations are possible.
The most likely blood type for the child is A positive - but A negative, O positive and O negative are also possible depending on the genotypes of the parents. If both parents are heterozygous AO, then the child could have either A or O type blood. If either parent is homozygous, AA, then the child must have blood type A. If the parent with positive blood is heterozygous, Dd (+-), then the child could have either positive or negative type blood. If they are homozygous, DD (++), then the child must have positive type blood.
Yes, it is possible for a child to have a negative blood type if both parents are carriers of the Rh negative gene, even if one parent is O positive and the other is A positive. Blood type inheritance is determined by a combination of both parents' blood types and Rh factors.
One of the parents must be A or AB, and one must be positive.
The child could have blood type O positive or A positive. The ABO blood type system is inherited independently from the Rh factor, so the child could inherit the O gene from one parent and the A gene from the other.