at least one of them have negative group.
No, the child's blood group would be the same as one of it's parents.
Yes, parents with blood group O positive can have a child with blood group O negative. This is possible if one parent is heterozygous for the Rh factor (one parent has both positive and negative Rh alleles), allowing for the possibility of the child inheriting the negative Rh factor.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
Yes, parents with O and A blood types can have a child with A- blood type. The child would inherit one A allele from the parent with A blood type and one negative Rh factor from the parent with O blood type.
It is not possible for two parents with blood type O negative to have a child with blood type AB. In the ABO blood group system, type O is recessive and AB is a combination of A and B, making it impossible for two parents with type O blood to produce a child with type AB blood.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
No, the child's blood group would be the same as one of it's parents.
Yes, parents with blood group O positive can have a child with blood group O negative. This is possible if one parent is heterozygous for the Rh factor (one parent has both positive and negative Rh alleles), allowing for the possibility of the child inheriting the negative Rh factor.
No, At least one parent would have to be an A (or an AB) for a child to have group A blood.
Yes. Negative is recessive.
normally they have "o" plus or negative.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
Answer Mostly with Parent's groupes.
Yes, parents with O and A blood types can have a child with A- blood type. The child would inherit one A allele from the parent with A blood type and one negative Rh factor from the parent with O blood type.
It is not possible for two parents with blood type O negative to have a child with blood type AB. In the ABO blood group system, type O is recessive and AB is a combination of A and B, making it impossible for two parents with type O blood to produce a child with type AB blood.
No, a child's blood group does not have to match either parent's blood group exactly. A child's blood group is determined by a combination of the parents' blood types, following specific inheritance patterns. It is possible for a child's blood group to be different from that of their parents.