The probability of rolling a 2 is 1 in 6. The probability of rolling an even number is 3 in 6. The probability of doing both, on two rolls, is 3 in 36, or 1 in 12.
The probability of throwing just one one with two dice can be calculated by considering the different ways it can occur. There are two ways to get one one: rolling a one on the first die and any number on the second die, or rolling any number on the first die and a one on the second die. There are a total of 36 possible outcomes when rolling two dice, so the probability is 2/36, which simplifies to 1/18.
The probability of rolling a six on either (or both) die is 11/36.
The probability is 4/36 = 1/9
It is 1/12.
The probability of rolling two prime numbers on a standard pair of dice is 1 in 4, or 0.25. Take the probability of rolling a prime on one die, 3 in 6, or 1 in 2, or 0.5, and square it.
For two fair die, it is 5/36.
The probability of rolling a 4 in a die is 1 in 6, or about 0.1667. The probability, then, of rolling a 4 in at least one of two dice rolls is twice that, or 2 in 6, or 0.3333. The probability of rolling a sum of 4 in two dice is 3 in 36, or 1 in 18, or about 0.05556.
With standard dice, zero.
It is 1/18.
The probability of rolling a sum of 2 is 1/36 The probability of rolling the value 2 on one die or the other (or both) is 11/36
About 98 percent.