With two tetrahedral dice labelled 1-4 the probability is zero as the maximum score possible is 8.
With two cubical dice labelled 1-6, the probability is 6/36 = 1/6
Other d&d dice (d8, d10, d12, d20) are left as an exercise for the reader.
The answer depends on what you are rolling: a number cube or some other shape? For a die, the answer is 2/3.
Prob(Rolling a number greater than 2) = 1 - Prob(Not rolling a number greater than 2 on either die) = 1 - Prob(Rolling a number less than or equal to 2 on both dice) = 1 - Prob(Rolling a number less than or equal to 2 on a die)2 = 1 - (1/3)2 = 8/9
It depends on what the numbers on all the balls are.
In one throw it is 1/3
It is 0.8181... recurring.
the answer is 4
The answer depends on what you are rolling: a number cube or some other shape? For a die, the answer is 2/3.
For 6 sided dice, there is only 1 way to get a 2: (1,1). There are 36 outcomes rolling 2 dice; so the probability of rolling two numbers whose sum is 2 is 1/36.
It is 0.25
Prob(Rolling a number greater than 2) = 1 - Prob(Not rolling a number greater than 2 on either die) = 1 - Prob(Rolling a number less than or equal to 2 on both dice) = 1 - Prob(Rolling a number less than or equal to 2 on a die)2 = 1 - (1/3)2 = 8/9
It depends on what the numbers on all the balls are.
In one throw it is 1/3
5/36
It is 0.8181... recurring.
As there are an equal number of odd and even numbers on a single die, the odds of rolling an even number would be 50/50.
It is 1.
9/11