1/3 : One third, is the probability of 33.33%
in other words 33% if your round.
Hope I helped.
The probability level for an outcome is the probability that the outcome was at least as extreme as the one that was observed.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
A probability of one means that the outcome will definitely occur.Not asked, but answered for completeness sake - a probability of zero means that the outcome will definitely not occur. Probability always lies between zero and one, inclusive.
It depends on the particular problem. An outcome of 1, for example, is one of the outcomes of rolling a standard six-sided die.A probability of 1, however, which is what the question might mean, means that the outcome is certain to occur, but that outcome is not necessarily 1. This is one of the distinctions between probability and outcome - they are not the same thing.
It is an impossible event - which has probability zero.
"one third" is not an event and so cannot have complement nor a probability.
Yes, it certainly can if there is only one possible outcome. For instance, the probability of drawing a red ball from a bag containing nothing but red balls is equal to one.
When the outcome of one event affects the probability of a second event, this relationship is described as conditional probability. In such cases, the likelihood of the second event occurring changes based on the outcome of the first event. For example, if it starts raining, the probability of people carrying umbrellas increases. This interaction highlights how events can be interconnected in probabilistic scenarios.
Whenever there is only one possible outcome of an experiment, the probability of this outcome is 1, which you can also write as 100%.
Dependent events.
Independent events.
There can be no sensible answer because no outcome is specified.