A die has six sides, with one additional dot on each side. 1+2+3+4+5+6=21 It has 21 dots total.
if you look at a dice a dice has 6 faces. A dice is a cube so a cube has 6 faces
6
Depends on how many dice are involved. 1 die 1/6 2 dice 1/3 3 dice 1/2
1/36, one chance when on both (1,1)
21 dots on 1 dice 21 dots
21 dots on a dice
One dot and a comma - like this ;
Simply dice, dice is the plural of die. One die and a pair of dice.
There are 21 dots in all, on a normal six sided die. Other varieties exist, for use in role playing games.
The probability, when the 2-dice total is 5, that one of the two dice shows a two is 1/2. The probability that that die is selected is 1/4.The probability, when the 2-dice total is 5, that one of the two dice shows a two is 1/2. The probability that that die is selected is 1/4.The probability, when the 2-dice total is 5, that one of the two dice shows a two is 1/2. The probability that that die is selected is 1/4.The probability, when the 2-dice total is 5, that one of the two dice shows a two is 1/2. The probability that that die is selected is 1/4.
That sounds like a diceDid you know opposite sides of a dice add up to 7.ActuallyTwo dice, one die. Strange but true
18
I think they want dice but that's not really right because one of them is more properly a die.
A die has six sides, with one additional dot on each side. 1+2+3+4+5+6=21 It has 21 dots total.
There are a total of 9. 2 in one zone, 5 in the middle, and 2 in the other zone.
Dice was a very popular and commonly-played gambling activity, from the lowest peasants to royalty. Dice were small cubes of bone, stone, ivory, jet or wood, with bone being the most common material. Each side was marked with incised dots representing the numbers from 1 to 6, but not always in the same pattern as on modern dice (16 variant formats of the numbering pattern have been identified). The rules of the game probably varied just as much as the dice and we do not have any surviving set of rules. We do know that many dice were "loaded", with lead pieces inset under the dots on one face (often the 6) - the dots were then filled in with pigment which hid these pieces of lead. The result was that throwing a 6 was virtually impossible and such dice were used to cheat gullible people out of their money. Travelling fraudsters must have made a reasonably good income in this way.