i know im rh neg and my 2 brothers are rh neg. So i guess we ar eok. i have 3 children myself, but i dont know their blood type.
no, z score can be negative but a probability is a always positive between 0 and 1.
Probability values are never negative and are always between 0-1 according to the definition Probability of A= Number of outcomes classified as A/Total number of possible outcomes
Let z be positive so that -z is the negative z score for which you want the probability. Pr(Z < -z) = Pr(Z > z) = 1 - Pr(Z < z).
The value of a probability is a number between 0 and 1 So it's either positive and less or equal to one or null
It can have either a negative or positive trend
No. Probability values always have to be positive.
no, z score can be negative but a probability is a always positive between 0 and 1.
Probability is a ratio of two counts: both of which MUST be positive. Their ratio cannot be negative.
No. Probability is always represented as a positive ratio/fraction/percent.
CAN children hae positive and negative RH factor blood types
Yes.
If the mother is A negative, and the father is B positive, they could have children who are A negative, A positive, B negative, B positive, AB negative, AB positive, O negative, or O positive.
An O negative parent and a B positive parent can have children with blood types O positive or O negative, as well as B positive or B negative.
Yes!
The father's blood type could be either A positive or A negative. The children inherited the A antigen from the father, resulting in their blood type as A negative. The Rh factor (positive or negative) is inherited separately, so the father could be either positive or negative.
positive because there are more choices of clothes
If both parents are O, the children will definitely be O. The O type is recessive--both alleles must be O for the child to be O. Since both parents are O, we know the union contains four O alleles--hence any child will be O. The Rhesus factor is the question. The Rh positive allele is dominant, so an Rh positive person can carry either one or two of them and still be positive. If one parent carries two Rh positive alleles, any child of theirs will be Rh positive. If both of them carry an Rh negative allele, there's a 25 percent probability the child will inherit two Rh negative alleles and be Rh negative. (The other choices are the child inherits two Rh positive alleles, at 25 percent probability, and the child inherits only one Rh positive allele, at 50 percent probability because the Rh positive allele could come from either parent.)