For a baby with AB blood type : both parents should be AB. or one is AB and the other is B. or one is A and the other is B.
AB+ B+ or A+
b2 + ab - 2 - 2b2 + 2ab = -b2 + ab - 2 which cannot be simplified further.
ab=1a+1b a is equal to either 0 or two, and b is equal to a
Commutativity.
The child would most likely be ab plus but she/he could also be a or b.
Yes, but with low percentage.
Yes, it is possible for two parents, one with AB+ blood type and the other with O+ blood type, to have a child with O+ blood type. When two parents with different blood types have a child, the child's blood type can be a combination of the parents' blood types through genetic inheritance.
For a baby with AB blood type : both parents should be AB. or one is AB and the other is B. or one is A and the other is B.
No. O is recessive. The parents would have to have A and B phenotypes in order for their child to have AB- blood.
No. O is recessive to all other blood types. So if you're O you can't carry A or B. An AB child needs each parent to be carrying either A or B. Therefore two O parents cannot have an AB child.
No, a child cannot have AB blood type if the parents are O+ and A+. The child's blood type would most likely be A+ like one of the parents.
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. If two parents both have A blood then they are either AA or Ai. This means they can have a child with AA, Ai, or ii (O blood). To get AB there must be a B somewhere.
It is not possible for two parents with blood types AB and B to have a child with O blood type. A child's blood type is determined by the combination of their parents' genes, and O blood type requires both parents to have at least one O gene.
No. One would have to be A or AB.
No to have an AB child the parents must have an A allele in one ine parent and a B in the other so that when they reproduce those two alleles (foumd on the chromosome) can be passed to the offspring and hence the child will be AB blood group. As the father is O (which is a recessive allele) he cannot have either an A or B allele and so the offspring will always have one O allele and either the A or B allele from the mother. The child cannot be AB.