You can't be sure, hair colour is determined by DNA - who gets what is totally unknown. Although there are some factors that make it more likely to get one trait or another. For example brown eyes are the more dominant trait so a blue eyed parent and a brown eyed parent will most likely have a brown eyes child.
I have blue eyes and my husband has brown eyes and my baby has blue eyes however so even the dominant/recessive gene is only a statistical probability not a 100% fact. -Edit- Granted there are statistical anomalies. In almost all cases the dominant/recessive gene concept is true, normally if it does not it is because of a mutation has occurred in the genome. In the previous answers case, every person carries 2 genes (more for some other genetic traits, 2 for the most basic). What ever gene is more dominant is the one that controls the outcome. It is more likely that the husband carried both a blue and a brown eye gene, leaving them a 50/50% probability that their children would have blue eyes.
It's impossible to tell, becaue it depends on the genetic make-up of both parents, since you get your color-genes from your grandparents (and then it's passed on through your parents).
The baby will have green eyes and either red or brown hair :)
There are several pages on the WWW that can help you to determine the probability of your unborn child eye colors. The color is dependent on your parents eye color as well. Try google something like: eye color determination
probably not, considering there going to have that dominant gene but if they have grandparents for relatives with dark brown hair it is possible. Its like when two brown eyed people have a blue eyes baby its happenedd.hope i helped :)
YES
It's impossible to tell, becaue it depends on the genetic make-up of both parents, since you get your color-genes from your grandparents (and then it's passed on through your parents).
Yes. Especially since the genetics aren't just from the parents. Grandparents and great grandparents also play a part of the puzzle. Also, keep in mind the hair color changes. A baby that might be blond now may end up having dark hair later in life.
== == I dont know The babys hair can be any color and their eyes can be any color it can change later on but the color also depends on the grandparents
By the color of the ribbon in the baby's hair or, if the baby has no hair, by the color of the clothing or blanket. If the baby is a boy, the color will be blue; if the baby is a girl, the color will be pink.
Yes and No. Yes- if the color your hair is dyed is a naturally occurring hair color, there is a chance that your child may have that hair color. No- Your baby's hair will never turn the color of your hair BECAUSE you dyed it. The dye will not change your genetic makeup.
Its impossible to tell, since you first have to find out what colors their other ancestors were, like the grandparents, the great grandparents, even the great great grandparents, and out of all those colors, that's a possibility of what color the baby chihuahuas will be. its all in genetics
Sure, both of my grandparents had black hair and they had six children, about half had brown.
brown eyes (like poop) and probably brown hair (like poop again). And in some rare cases, you may get a blonde green eyed baby. Look at the grandparents, cause they also play a key role in this.
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50% that the child will have either.
I don't know- eye color is not determined by hair color.
If the females parents both have dark brown hair and the males parents both have light brown hair, their is a 50/50 chance of having either colour hair. Although if that is not the case, the child could have blonde hair if one of the grandparents has blonde hair also, there is not a definite hair colour. It is all down to chance.