Similar Questions
- Answer: Yes, if the father is heterogeneous positive.
- Answer: Yes. This would mean the mother was AO-- and the father was AO++ or AO+-. In a family like this, all children would have blood type A+, A-, O+, or O-.
- Answer: it depends it will usually be a boy
- Answer: yes they can.Because there is two ways to express the A group persons that is either IaIa or IaIi ,if both parents are of the second type they can have a child that is O because the person of O type is expressed like this IiIi.
- Answer: no because it would put an o negative child
- Answer: Any blood type, as long as this is the first child. If you already have a child check out erytroblastosis fetalis
- Answer: Yes, I think so. Mothes is like o.o. (O) and dad a.b. (AB), so the possibilitis for babies are a.o. (blood type A) and b.o. (blood type B).
- Answer: No, This is impossible!
- Answer: Never without the real mother present.
Answer:
Anyone can "baptize" anyone with or without their permission or the permission of any relative (some churches baptize everyone not in their faith to their faith) - the question becomes so what:- Without the permission of a legal guardian it is a form of bullying
- Without the permission of the baptized party is is similar to entering someone else into contract without their agreement
- It has no standing in law - no baptism does
- It does not influence the life of the baptized party
- Answer: Yes, it is possible. Its really hard to explain...but if you were wondering if you are adopetd or something because of this then that is not a good reason to base it off.
Its really not hard to explain, there are two genotypes for the phenotype A
AA or AO, one from dad one from mom so depending on parents genotypes you can get AA ao and oo children - Answer: No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor.No - blood group O is recessive, two O parents can only produce an O child. A Rh+ mother and Rh- father can produce either a Rh+ or Rh- child - Rh+ is the dominant factor.
- Answer: yes it is possible however unlikely.
- Answer: YES. Blood type is determined by two alleles. An "A" individual can be homozygous "AA" or heterozygous "AO" and still be considered type A. The same is true of a "B" individual. If the father is "AO" and the mother is "BO" then statistically, they have a 25% chance of having a child that is "OO" or type O.
- Answer: yes if both are heterozygotes