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In the Phillipines lives a woman who grow up in a poor family. When doctors determinated her blood they saw that 3/4 of her blood was royal blood. It means that she is a granddaughter of a Royal blood person. Can someone declare that?

2006-07-24 09:10:12 · 3 answers · asked by POPEYE 1 in Health Other - Health

3 answers

The answer is we all have the same blood, mainly water with red and white blood cells in it, and nutrients to feed the cells, waste products to be moved to the liver and kidneys. Doctors will tell you that all blood is basically the same. There is no such thing as actually Royal Blood or "Blue Blood" as some would say.

What Royal Blood means is that a person can trace their genealogy back through generations to a person who was a King.
These days that can be confirmed by genetic testing sometimes.

Otherwise the person who says that doctors who told her she was 3/4 Royal blood was lying. Genealogically speaking the grand child of a king would only be 1/4 "royal blood."

2006-07-24 09:22:56 · answer #1 · answered by William E 5 · 1 0

'Royal blood' is a figure of speech. When someone one says that so-and-so has 'royal blood' all they are saying is that this person shares blood with (is related to) a member of the royal family.

As you can see, its not something a doctor can test for :). This is a job for a geneologist (someone who studies a family's history); not a medical doctor.

2006-07-24 16:19:59 · answer #2 · answered by sheerpanache 2 · 0 0

if you go back far enough we all have royal blood and also slave blood. even if you don't like it we are all related.

2006-07-24 16:36:34 · answer #3 · answered by pizzapizza 3 · 0 0

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