Are you asking if the sex of the second child is determined by the sex of the first child? No, naturally its a fifty-fifty chance.
Most likely if it has a penis or a vagina.
No, the male determines the sex of a child.
The sex of a child is determined by the sex chromosome of the sperm cell (which comes from the father). If it is a Y, the child will be a boy, if it is an X, the child will be a girl.
The sex of a child is determined by the sex chromosome present in the father's sperm cell. If he donates an X, the child will be a girl, if he donates a Y, the child will be a boy. The historical or ancestral lineage doesn't have anything to do with the child's sex.
In humans the sex of the offspring is determined by which sperm is able to fertilize the ovum. If a sperm containing the X chromosome fertilizes the ovum, a female offspring results. If a sperm containing the Y chromosome fertilizes the ovum, a male offspring results
The sex of a child is determined by the father because the genes that determine sex come from the male sperm.
Crocodile embryos do not have sex chromosomes (which determine the sex of a child in humans) and sex is not determined genetically in crocodiles. The sex of a crocodile is determined by temperature -- with males around 31.6 degrees Celsius (89 degrees Fahrenheit) and with females at slightly lower or higher temperature.
Sex-liked means liking sex and sex determined is the resolution to have sex.
Because sex is determined by the male parent, not the female.
x or y chromosomes it's all up to the daddy since he has both. xx is girl xy is boy
Male - in humans the sex is determined by the presence of a Y chromosome. In other animals sex can be determined by the ratio of sex chromosomes, or the total number of chromosomes.