ANSWERS: 23
  • it depends on what the mother looks like
  • The odds of any male having a baby are zero. A very light skinned woman, impregnated by the man you've described, would have fair odds having such a baby, but I doubt the platinum blonde hair.
  • We have to know the female's half of it before we can answer you. Put it in a comment and we'll see. Oh, and the other half of yours.
  • I had a Mexican friend with light skin, blue eyes, red hair, and freckles. His family were normally colored for Mexicans. I met his mother and some of his siblings and all of them were normal colored for Mexicans... dark Mexicans, at that. Oh they called themselves "Mexican," not "Hispanic," before someone gets on me for saying Mexican. The family thought that his mother slept around and, he told me, he was told that there was quite the ruckus. She was adamant that she did not. So they started digging. There was record from the family from hundreds of years ago of an ancestor of his being raped by a white person. There had to be some race mixing on his father's side for him to have that coloring, I would think. Nobody in that family had ever shown that coloring until my friend. Genetics are a funny thing. The odds of my friend having that coloring were extremely slim but it happened.
  • why would you want that? are you insecure?
  • Blue eyes are a recessive gene. If you don't have one recessive blue eyes gene, (which you might, as you probably know,) then you have no chance of having a blue eyed child even if your wife has blue eyes. If you have on recessive blue eyes gene, then you have a 50% chance of any child having blue eyes. If you have one recessive blue gene, and your wife has one recessive blue gene, then you have a 25% chance of having a blue eyed child. Skin seems to come in many different shades, getting lighter rather than being an either or situation. don't know about the blond hair.
  • If you're half white it can happen. These are recessive genes that would never be visible in yourself.
  • the odds aren't good
  • Look at Sonny and Cher having a blond child.
  • unless she's super pale and super blonde, i would highly doubt it. even is she was super blonde whitey , i would still doubt it. be very suspicious!
  • in my family of 12 we all have dark hair and dark eyes bar one sister who is blond/blue eyed. my boyfriend's aunt and her husband both have dark hair/eyes their three childern have blue eyes and red hair. even stranger a couple in england, the father is black, mother is while, they had twins, one was black the other was white!! not mixed at all. DNA can be a strange thing.
  • My ex's family had a very dark hispanic father and a white mother. They had an even split of kids who were "hispanic looking," so to speak, and kids who were whitey mc whiterson.
  • Anything is possible. I remember a couple who had twin boys, one w/dark complexion and hair, and the other fair and blond. They didn't even look like brothers, but each resembled a different family member.
  • The odds are very high if a half-Hispanic male is Caucasian and if the mom is Paris Hilton. ;)
  • If your partner is lighter skinned the pale skin is possible, same goes for the blonde hair if your partner is blonde, but the blue eyes not that possible due to the fact that if one parent has dark brown eyes even if the other has a colored eye such as blue or green it would still usualy come out brown
  • I remember reading in the Weekly Reader in 1962 that a couple had their child taken away in South Africa because she had African features. My brother-in law does and he's 50% Irish and %0% Italian. The moops came through Sicily (Seinfeld spelling) and the Vikings came to America before the Conqistadors.
  • If thats the picture of the mother with you I'd say 50%
  • Next to zero. She's banging someone else. Make her talk.
  • its possible. if u are not sure get a DNA test
  • I know it seems unlikely but it is possible.
  • My husband and I both have black hair and dark eyes. We have 4 children, 3 with blonde hair and one redhead. There is only a 25% chance of us having children with anything but dark hair, but it has happened 4 times now. We both must have the gene for lighter hair and we both must pass that recessive gene for our children to get it. B=Black b=blonde Mother's genes=Bb=black hair (B is dominant) Father's genes=Bb=black hair Child's genes=BB=black hair (big B from each parent) Bb=black hair (small b from mom, big B from dad) Bb=black hair (big B from mom, small b from dad) bb=blonde hair (small b from mom, small b from dad) Do you understand? The chances exist, but they are typically low. With mom being a blonde, the chances increase to about 50% from 25% if both are brunettes.
  • Depends on the dominant and recessive genes. It's very possible, both my parents were dark haired with brown eyes..........three brothers all have blonde hair and blue eyes.
  • Both me and my boyfriend are half breed mexicans with brown eyes and black hair. Both of our children have blue eyes, our son having blonde hair. Though it maybe highly unlikely, it is possible. Though, I don't know the odds

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