No. The child would receive type a antigens from both of their parents and no type b antigens.
Yes, even though the father is blood type O he could father an O child, A child, or B child.
Yes, the father with blood type B+ could be the biological father of a child with blood type A+. A child can inherit a different blood type from their parents due to genetic inheritance involving multiple alleles for the ABO blood group system.
Yes! You could produce a child with either A or B blood.
Could be B or could be O.
no. because if the child's blood type is B, one of the parent must have type B or type AB but non of them has it. so it is impossible for the father to have typeA.
No
Yes, a man with blood type B and a woman with blood type AB can have a child with blood type B. The child would inherit one allele for blood type B from the father and either an A or B allele from the mother. The child's blood type could be either B or AB.
Yes, this will depend on the father blood type, so for a child to be B-, the father could be either B or AB negative or positive.
It's possible that the child could be either A, B, AB, or O.
Yes, the child's blood type can be B if the father has o.
The child's blood type could be B positive or O positive.
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.