Rh is not a blood type by itself but is just one part of what makes up a blood type. There are two parts to blood typing: the ABO aspect and the Rh factor. One has blood type A, B, AB, or O, AND then is either Rh positive, or Rh negative. Hence why you hear blood types like A positive, O negative, etc. The positive/ negative is referring to the Rh factor.
Rh positive is dominant, so one only needs one Rh positive parent so be Rh positive. Rh negative is recessive. If both parents are Rh negative, the child they have must be Rh negative as well.
To know what blood type you could be, you need to know your parents' entire blood type.
It's not possible for two O+ parents to have a child with A blood type. A child's blood type is determined by the combination of genes inherited from the parents, and in this case, the genetic combination would result in the child also having O+ blood type. A possible explanation could be an error in blood typing or paternity.
It is not possible for two parents with blood types AB and B to have a child with O blood type. A child's blood type is determined by the combination of their parents' genes, and O blood type requires both parents to have at least one O gene.
Not necessarily. The blood type of a child is determined by the combination of the parents' blood types. It is possible for a daughter to have a different blood type than her father, depending on the specific blood type alleles inherited from both parents.
O plus.
If they're both homozygous (AA, AA): A is produced. If they're both heterozygous (Ai, Ai): A or O is produced. If one of them is heterozygous and the other not (Ai, AA): A is produced.
If both of your parents have Type A blood, the blood of you and your siblings can be A or O.
Only if it was adopted...the only options for that child's blood type would be A or O if the biological parents are both Type A.
If both parents have blood type O, then the baby's blood type will also be O. Blood type O is recessive, so both parents must have two O alleles to pass on an O blood type to their child.
If both parents have type A blood then the baby should have type A blood. or type O blood
Both parents can be anything other than both AB.
No. One of the parents would have to be type A or AB.
No, B is dominant therefore a parent would have to have B type blood.
blood group "A" or "O".
If both parents have a positive blood type, the chances of their child inheriting a positive blood type are 100.
If both parents are type O blood they will only have type O children
Yes, it is possible for two parents who are both blood group O to have a child who is blood group A. This can occur if both parents carry the A allele in their genes, even though their own blood types are O.
If both parents have O blood type, the chances of their child also having O blood type is 100.