0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive! 0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive!
Yes, we all get our blood groups from either our parents and even grandparents.
Positive 3 is > 0 while, negative 2 is < 0. So positive 3 > negative 2.
0 can never be positive or negative BUT Neutral.
no 0 is neither positive or negative
If a mother has blood group 0 positive and the father is also 0 positive can they give birth to a child with blood group 0 negative?
Yes
The possibilities include B positive, B negative, O positive, O negative.
Type O or type A broadly speaking. it also depends on other proteins found on the surface of donated blood cells such as rhesus proteins. someone can be rhesus plus or rhesus minus meaning they either have the protein or don't. You can only receive blood of the same rhesus type of as your own for example: A rhesus positive can only receive A rhesus positive or O rhesus positive
No. A parent with AB blood cannot have a child with O blood type.
It depends on who the recipient is. An A+ recipient may receive O+ blood ; an O+ recipient cannot receive A+ blood. An A+ recipient may receive A+, A-, O+, or 0- blood. An O+ recipient may receive O+ or O- blood.
O positive is a very common blood type. It is the most common blood type today. There are not many people with O negative. O negative is very rare.
Everyone (any blood type) O negative is known as the universal donor. They can only receive O negative.
Yes, the child of these parents could have either blood type O+, O-, A+, or A-.
0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive! 0, Because you don't know how negative or how positive!
This not entirely true while an Rh- person can not receive Rh+ blood due to the fact as stated above an Rh+ person can receive Rh- blood because there is no Rh in the blood. This is why O- people are universal donors meaning they are able to give blood to anyone, but can only receive 0- blood.
Yes, we all get our blood groups from either our parents and even grandparents.