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Yes, a parent with O positive blood and a parent with A positive blood can have children together. The child could inherit either parent's blood type, resulting in the child having either O positive or A positive blood type.
No
Yes, it is possible for parents who are B positive to have an AB positive baby. This would occur if one parent is B positive with the genotype BO and the other parent is AB positive with the genotype AB. The child could inherit the A and B alleles from each parent, resulting in an AB blood type.
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.
The possible blood types for their children are A positive or O positive. The child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so they can receive either the A allele from the A positive parent or the O allele from the O positive parent.
Yes, a parent with O positive blood and a parent with A positive blood can have children together. The child could inherit either parent's blood type, resulting in the child having either O positive or A positive blood type.
No
No. Only 1 allele each can be passed down from each parent, so it is impossible for the child to have 2 dominant alleles if 1 parent has blood group 0.
To take a Minor child abroad with intent to reside abroad without the consent of the non custodial parent would constitute kidnapping. A vacation is not a change of residence and therefore is not disallowed. Permission should be obtained from the non custodial parent in writing to prevent any misunderstandings later.
no
No - a broken family is one where the parents are officially separated or divorved - not just because one parent works abroad.
Yes, it is possible for parents who are B positive to have an AB positive baby. This would occur if one parent is B positive with the genotype BO and the other parent is AB positive with the genotype AB. The child could inherit the A and B alleles from each parent, resulting in an AB blood type.
Yes, they can.
rarely can be
Yes, with a percentage reaches only to 25%.
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.
A divorce with the custody of a child involved can get very tricky when one parent lives abroad. It is almost impossible to force the absent parent to pay child support, and if the parent takes the child to some countries it may be impossible for the US parent to get the child back,