Yes.
No. An AB neg can receive blood from any blood group with a negative Rh (A neg, B neg, AB neg, O neg).
People with blood type AB can donate to other individuals with AB, as they are universal plasma donors. However, they can receive blood only from other AB individuals, as they are universal plasma receivers.
The chief advantage of having type AB positive blood is the ability to accept a blood donation from a person of any blood type. AB + is called the universal recipient.
then the baby will be O plus, or AB plus , I think .
Yes, a person with AB- blood can receive O- blood in a transfusion because AB can receive blood from A, B, AB, and O blood types. However, individuals with AB- blood type can only donate to other individuals with AB blood type.
Yes, theoretically a person with AB+ blood group can accept blood of any other group. But practically it is not practiced.
AB+ is the the universal acceptor, which can receive any blood type. People with AB have no antibodies to react with either A or B blood antigen coat. O- is the universal donor, which can donate to anyone who needs blood as there are both AB antibodies.
Any blood type can marry any other blood type.
It depends on fathers blood type. If he is A or AB, child might be AB. Check the related links for more info.
Type A blood can be given to patients with type A or AB blood. Type B blood can be given to patients with type B or AB blood Type AB blood can only be given to patients with type AB blood. Type O blood can be given to patients with any blood type. The plus means the Rhetus group of the blood, which isn't as important as the blood type (A, B, AB or O), meaning there usually aren't complications even if blood of the wrong Rhetus group is given to a patient. In modern medicine, however, patients are nearly always given the blood of their own blood type, if possible.
You could potentially be: A Positive B Positive AB Positive A Negative B Negative AB Negative