a-
The child would most likely have either blood type A positive or B positive. A child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so with an AB negative mother and an O positive father, the child could receive the A allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type A positive. Alternatively, the child could receive the B allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type B positive.
Positive - most of them are far away.
50% chance of A. 50% chance of B. either positive or negative(shruggs). If the child is AB the mother screwed around on the 'dad' If the child is O you did the test wrong, because their is no way the woman can be wrong about whether or not the baby came out of her
If the mother's genotype is BB, the child can be type B or AB (50/50 chance). The child cannot be type A or O. If the mother's genotype is BO, the child can be any type, tho B or AB is more likely. The Rh factor is likely positive but can be negative. So, without knowing the mother's genotype, and the father's specific Rh factor (++ or +-), we cannot be sure.
Yes, she can. As far as blood type goes, if one parent is O and the other parent is B, the child can be either O or B. For Rh factor (i.e. negative or positive), if at least one parent is positive, then the child can be either negative or positive. If both parents are negative, then the child will be negative. So, it is perfectly plausible that it is his child.
AB+
For A+ and O- parents, the child can be either A or O, and either + or -. They are slightly more likely to be O+ than any other.
I think more likely B, not sure though.
Most likely A+ since blood type A is dominant over O Positive or negative is more of a guess since the parents hold the positive and negative alleles, the child will hold one of three combinations --(neg), -+(pos) or ++(pos). So the child will most likely carry the D antigen however this is just the most likely result.
Definitely. One Rh positive parent is at least 50% likely to produce Rh positive offspring.
If a father is O positive and a girl is A negative, this will not likely pose a problem with a baby. It may cause the mother to have to get a Rhogam shot when she is pregnant.
To determine if a sum will be positive or negative, you can analyze the signs of the numbers involved. If the majority of the numbers are positive, the sum is likely to be positive; if there are more negative numbers, the sum will likely be negative. Additionally, consider the absolute values of the numbers: if the positive numbers outweigh the negative ones in magnitude, the sum will be positive, and vice versa.
Negative blood types are the dominant gene, so it is more likely that the baby will have A- blood, but there is still a chance that it has A+.
The child would most likely have either blood type A positive or B positive. A child inherits one blood type allele from each parent, so with an AB negative mother and an O positive father, the child could receive the A allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type A positive. Alternatively, the child could receive the B allele from the mother and the O allele from the father, resulting in blood type B positive.
Positive - most of them are far away.
50% chance of A. 50% chance of B. either positive or negative(shruggs). If the child is AB the mother screwed around on the 'dad' If the child is O you did the test wrong, because their is no way the woman can be wrong about whether or not the baby came out of her
positive two whoever wrote positive 2 is wrong and most likely intoxicated or below 10 years old..the answer is really positive 4. 2 times two equals four and negative times negative equals positive..positive 4