Three Cards to Dead Time happened in 2010.
Three Cards to Dead Time was created on 2010-02-10.
Dead animals and plants decompose after some time
The probability of drawing three black cards one at a time with replacement from a standard deck of 52 cards is 1/3x1/2x26/52, which is 0.833.
It could if there was toxic chemicals released at the right time.
It is approx 0.41
I believe they will combine
The length of time you should keep employee time cards depends on your country's labor laws and recordkeeping requirements. While regulations vary, many businesses retain time and attendance records for at least 2 to 3 years, and some industries or jurisdictions require even longer retention periods. Keeping accurate time records is important for several reasons: Compliance with labor and wage regulations Payroll verification and audits Resolving employee disputes Supporting overtime and leave calculations Preparing for government inspections If your organization uses a digital time and attendance system, maintaining secure electronic records can simplify storage, retrieval, and reporting compared to paper time cards. It's always a good practice to review your local employment laws or consult an HR or legal professional to ensure your retention policy meets applicable requirements. Businesses across the Middle East often work with experienced solution providers like ID Vision to implement biometric time and attendance systems that securely store attendance records while making reporting and compliance much easier.
Normally yes, but if you happen to be dead at the time of the trimming of the hair then as long as you're dead, your hair will not grow back.
only at certain time rairlly that will happen but some ppl win gift cards
The number of selections of 3 cards that can be made from 12 different cards (it does not matter if they are face cards or not) is the number of combinations of 12 things taken three at a time. In this case it is (12! - 9!) / 3! which is 220.
The probability of drawing two blue cards froma box with 3 blue cards and 3 white cards, with replacement, is 1 in 4, or 0.25.The probability of drawing one blue card is 0.5, so the probability of drawing two is 0.5 squared, or 0.25.
I assume we do not replace the 8's after we pick one of them. This is sampling without replacement. Since there are four 8s, the odd of picking one of them out of 52 cards is 4/52 the first time, then we have three 8s left and only 51 cards so, 3/51 and then 2/50 the third time. The odd of drawing three consecutive eights is the product of those three probabilities. This is 4/52x3/51x2/50