The answer would be 25%.
thirteen sixteenths.
Assuming that children of either gender are equally likely, the answer is (1/2)3 = 1/8
There are 2 red queens, assuming a randomly shuffled deck the chances of any one card being selected is 1 in 52, therefore the chance of either of the red queens being selected is 2 in 52. This is normally shown as 1 in 26.
No. And not is spelling either! It is percent.
15% of 380 = 57 25% of 210 = 52.5
thirteen sixteenths.
Assuming that children of either gender are equally likely, the answer is (1/2)3 = 1/8
You mean shiny Pokemon. Every Pokemon has either a 1/8000 percent chance of being shiny or 1/800. Sorry I can't remember. Either way. They are rare.
The chance that a human zygote will receive one X and one Y sex chromosome during fertilization is 50 percent. This is because an individual inherits one sex chromosome from each parent, with the father contributing either an X or a Y chromosome, and the mother contributing an X chromosome.
Indications are that an estimated 66 percent of U.S. adults are either overweight or obese and 16.3% of children are obese.
Since each fertilization has 50% chance of either male of female, three females would be 12.5%
Each child would have a 50% chance of inheriting the curly hair allele from the mother and a 50% chance of inheriting the straight hair allele from the father. Therefore, on average, 2 of the 4 children would be expected to have straight hair and 2 with curly hair.
Each chil born has roughly a 50% chance of being AB, 25% chance of being A and a 25% chance of being B also the positive refers to a particular protein which is either present or absent from your cells (i.e +ve and -ve). All the children should be positive as both parent have the protein.
If a man is heterozygous for the alleles that cause the condition and has children with a woman who lacks that defective allele, there is a 50% chance that each of their children will inherit the defective allele. This is because the man can pass on either the normal or defective allele, resulting in a 50% chance of passing on the defective allele.
Assuming you mean Triplets, or three children at the same time- yes, you can! This can either be done by surrounding your pregnant sim with children's objects and having her watch children's television (for rather long intervals). Or, if she has enough Lifetime Happiness, she can "buy" the Fertility Treatment Reward- which will increase her chances.
I'm Assuming, Either what you pay for it Or how well you do at it.
There are 2 red queens, assuming a randomly shuffled deck the chances of any one card being selected is 1 in 52, therefore the chance of either of the red queens being selected is 2 in 52. This is normally shown as 1 in 26.