1/6
If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.
The probability is 1/6.
The probability that you will roll doubles on a pair of dice is 1 in 6. The probability that you roll "something" on the first die is 1 in 1. The probability that the second die will match the first die is 1 in 6. The resultant probability is simply the product of (1 in 1) and (1 in 6).
You cannot roll "a dice" because it is one die, many dice. If you roll an ordinary, 6 faced die, the probability that it will land on 1 is 1/6.
It is 1: if you roll the die often enough. On a single roll of a fair die, the probability is 1/6.
The probability of rolling a four on a 6-sided die is 1 in 6, or approximately 16.67%. Since the die has 6 equally likely outcomes (the numbers 1 to 6), and only one of those outcomes is a four, the probability is 1/6.
If the die is fair, the probability is 1/6.
If the die is fair, the probability is 1/6.
Assuming you are talking about fair, six-sided dice, then the probability of rolling a 1 on the first roll in 1/6, and the probability of rolling a 2 on the second roll is 1/6. Putting these together, the probability of rolling 1 on the first die and 2 on the second die is 1/36. If you do not care about the order, then you could roll 1,2 or 2,1; in this case the probability would be 2/36, or 1/18.
The probability of getting a 7 on one roll of a die is zero.If you meant to ask about two dice, the probability is 6 in 36, or 1 in 6.
With a normal 6-sided die the probability would be 2/6, or 1/3.
Assuming a fair die and only one roll, the probability is 1/6.