If you join one of the Armed Services, they will gladly give you your blood type--and you'll even have it noted on a tag that you wear around your neck! .
It actually depends where and when they were born. Look for it in records first. If not, it's an easy test for your doctor to order.
Also, if you've ever given blood there should be a record.
Ask your doctor the next time you go. You were tested when you were born. It is in your records.
Ask your Mom.
Well, if you're 17 (or 16 with parental consent) you can go down to the Red Cross and donate some blood, and they will do a test to tell you what your blood type is. And then you will be sent a card with your blood type on it. Otherwise your doctor can send a sample of your blood out to have the test done.By the way, if your father is AB- and your mother is O+, you blood should be A or B, Rh+ or Rh-.
Donate a pint of blood to the Red Cross & you'll both help someone and they'll tell you your type.
AB- is very rare, yes. But it's also the universal recipient. Your Dad can receive blood from absolutely anyone, including you (no matter what your blood type is).
And the other way around, your Dad cannot donate to you no matter what, since you are either A or B and your Dad is AB. I'm just curious what benefit you're expecting by finding out your blood type.
Re-reading the details, it seems like you think you might be AB like your father. That's not possible. If your Dad is AB and your mother is O, you are either A or B.
Not AB.
You can go to your family doctor or any other public clinic to get your blood type tested. Based on the information you have given regarding you parents blood types, your blood type should be A or B not AB. Your RH factor may be either positive or negative.
You're just like me. Just before I tested my own blood when I was at high school, my mom said that her blood type was O just like mine, and my dad was A. But my blood test result is AB, so my mom blood type was wrong, she should had a blood type B.
Gen A = A and O; Gen B = B and O; Gen O = O; Gen AB = A, B, and O. If a woman with blood type A married to a B blood type man. Their children blood type can be A, B, O, or AB.
Positive or negative blood type is needed a further blood test.
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