"There is a high probability of rain this evening."
In a line of dialogue in a story. Or if you are quoting a person. So if you were to say and 7 times consecutively, and i quoted you on paper, it would be grammatically correct.
The probability is 2/11.
4/11
they are alike because they both have the last word "probability"
The probability of picking an 's' in the word Mississippi is 100% - you will always find one ... eventually. However if you mean with single choice from the 11 characters of the word Mississippi, then the probability is 4 chances in 11 which is just over 36% or a probability of 0.363636 recurring. My odd answer illustrates the need to pose questions without ambiguity. Beano GB
This question does not make sense as 'consecutively' conflicts with 'in any order'. There may not be any words where these letters come consecutively, but 'in any order' there are in fighter.
consecutively - in a consecutive manner; "he was consecutively ill, then well, then ill again"
Since the word "probability" contains only letters, then the probability of choosing a letter from the word "probability" is 1, i.e. it is certain to happen.
3 times!
Lightning
Consecutively. Also "in a row". Examples: He ate five cheeseburgers one by one. He ate five cheeseburgers consecutively. He ate five cheeseburgers in a row.
2/11
"There is a high probability of rain this evening."
The word 'probability' has 11 letters and 5 of them are vowels (including the 'y'). Therefore the probability of picking a vowel is 5/11.
compliment- it's a word for the probability minus one, so it something has a .6 probability, the probability(compliment) it woun't occur is .4 The answer for the Statistic Crossword Puzzle is "odds"
The probability is 2/11.