1 - (2/3)4
= 1 - 16/81
= 65/81
≈ 80.25%
it depends on how many numbers are on the number cube. if it only goes to 6, then the probability is 1/6. if it goes to 8 then the probability is 2/8. and so on and so on...
The term is probability (theoretical probability), or how likely a given event is to occur.
-39 is greater than -259 because the futher up the negatives the greater the number, and the futher down the negatives the lesser the number. With negatives how large the number is, is opposite to positives. With negative numbers the closer to 0 the greater the number, and the futher away from 0 the lesser the number.
The probability of selecting a 17 (or any number for that matter) is 1/20 or .05 or 5%.
2 numbers. few probabilities. Lets see. Number 1 probability: if your given numbers are this for example, 2 and 7. What is the probability of picking out 7? the Numerator is how many of that number is in the group. They are asking for 7? so how many 7's are in the group? 1. Then the denominator is how many numbers are in the group. There are 2 numbers in the group. so the probability of picking out a 7 would be 1/2. get it? if there were two 7's, then the probability would be 2/2 or 1. I hope I helped.
The probability of rolling a number greater than 6 on a die is 0.
For an ordinary number cube, the answer is 1/6
The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.The probability that the number rolled, on a fair, six sided die, will be greater than 4 is 1/3.
The probability is 0.
No, the number is greater than 1.
The answer depends on what you are rolling: three or more ordinary dice, or fewer dice with non-standard numbers on them, or a die with some other shape.
The probability is zero. No number can be less than 3 and greater than 4.
The answer depends on what the experiment is.
1/3
It can be any number greater than zero.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
It is 1/2.