Generally, yes. If you think about this question, the reasons may be obvious.
2/3 a chance.
If only one person is a carrier of cystic fibrosis than there is no chance of having a child with it. Both parents have to be carriers and even then there is only a 25% chance. If only one carries than there is a 50% chance that their children will carry but will not have cystic fibrosis.
It depends on the genotype of the parents, but assuming there is an equal chance of being dominant homozygous, recessive homozygous or heterozgous and there are only two possible genes, there is a 1 in 4 chance that the recessive trait will appear.
Sickle Cell Disease can be found in patients of any nationality or decent. Both parents must carry the recessive gene for this disease, and only then their offspring have a 25% chance of inheriting the disease. Those of African decent have approximately an 8% chance of inheriting the disease, Hispanics have about a 0.07% chance of inheriting the disease, and whites have roughly a 0.001% chance of inheriting the disease.
There is no simple answer to the question because the children's genders are not independent events. They depend on the parents' ages and their genes. Also, the answer will depend on how many children there are in total.
Greyson Chance's parents are Scott and Lisa Chance.
Well, if your father was an alchoholic before you were born, do have a bigger chance of being an alcholic because its in the genes already. Alcohol fools your brain into thinking it is good and when you have a over dose of it, it will most likely be in the genes already.
Kids cowboy apparels can be found in well sorted toy stores. The bigger the store, the bigger the chance they have it in stock. The smaller the store, the bigger the chance it will be ordered on demand.
Patricians by any chance wre u homeschooled by Keystone National highschool eamail me and let me no cuz i had that exact question on my test Kingaspinners@aol.com Patricians by any chance wre u homeschooled by Keystone National highschool eamail me and let me no cuz i had that exact question on my test Kingaspinners@aol.com
Yes but only a small chance.
no
Generally speaking, no chance.
Yes.
15
They never died.
direct chance of precipitation increases and water droplet increases
The chance of a diabetic baby born to parents who are both heterozygous normal depends on the sex. If the baby is a boy, there is a 50% chance while if it is a girl, there is a 25% chance.