Though extremely low, less than 1%, the human body does have the ability to repair injuries, which a vasectomy is from the point of view of the immune system.
50%, the Father's contribution decides the sex of a child.
There is no possibility that a male will inherit and X-linked recessive allele from his father because for a male child the father only contributes the Y chromosome to his son (of the XY pair he has). If the fater's X chromosome has a recessive allele then it is 100% certain that he will pas this on to all his daughters.
The gender of children is not a constant. It depends on the parental predispositions - mainly on the father's genes but apparently the mother's age can also affect the gender. The details of these influences are not understood well enough to develop an accurate model. If you make the simplistic but unjustified assumption that both genders are equally likely, the answer is 1/8.
The phrase "their father is some kind of civil serpent" is likely a play on words, combining "civil servant" and "serpent." A civil servant is a government employee, while a serpent is often associated with deceit or cunning behavior. Therefore, the phrase may suggest that the person's father is involved in government work but is also sly or dishonest in some way.
Probability of paternity (POP) means how likely the man is to be the father. If the result is a 99% (or anything over 64, haha) POP I would say that he's the daddy.
Not likely.
most likely..no. well that's what i think. ;)
To the state? Yes To the father? Not so likely
AB+
It's likely that the father will still owe support until/unless the child is adopted. see links
It depends on the state. In most states the father would still be required to pay child support, even though he is living with the mother and the child. However, if the father was financially supporting the mother and child, it's likely that the courts would suspend the child support order.
Since you asked for an opinion I will offer one. No, the child should not have the father's name since it is statistically likely she will have most of the responsibility for raising her child. If the father wanted the child to have his name then he should marry the mother and take full financial responsibility for the child. The mother will always be with her child. That may not be so with the father.Since you asked for an opinion I will offer one. No, the child should not have the father's name since it is statistically likely she will have most of the responsibility for raising her child. If the father wanted the child to have his name then he should marry the mother and take full financial responsibility for the child. The mother will always be with her child. That may not be so with the father.Since you asked for an opinion I will offer one. No, the child should not have the father's name since it is statistically likely she will have most of the responsibility for raising her child. If the father wanted the child to have his name then he should marry the mother and take full financial responsibility for the child. The mother will always be with her child. That may not be so with the father.Since you asked for an opinion I will offer one. No, the child should not have the father's name since it is statistically likely she will have most of the responsibility for raising her child. If the father wanted the child to have his name then he should marry the mother and take full financial responsibility for the child. The mother will always be with her child. That may not be so with the father.
Custody issues are decided by the courts on the basis of the best interest of the child in question. If the child is likely to be cared for better by the father than by the grandmother, then yes, the father would have a good chance of winning custody.
It depends on the disorder, but if the child has it and the father doresn't, it most likely means that the disorder was dominant and not recessive. Therefore, the mother would have had to at least have some history of having the disorder.
In many jurisdictions, the husband is presumed to be the child's father unless paternity is established by other means. The biological father would likely be required to pay child support even if the mother is married to someone else.
The biological father is the legal father. The husband is not the father unless he decides he wants to claim that title and wants to raise this child. Slim to none on that one. More likely you are going to be a single parent, so go after the bio dad for child support. He owes his child that.
Depending on the genotype of the father BB or BO (BO is probably more likely), the child could be. AB, BB, BO or AO. If the father is BB the child can only be AB or BB. If the father is BO the child could be AB, AO, AO or BB.