Check out http://insuranceinabottle.com/ for Detail list of what is in GBG 10 in One and on http://GBGMichigan.com there is list of foods and how much you would have to eat to get what is in GBG 10 in One.
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0.5
You should have equal ingredients according to the weight of the eggs.
33% for every girl... (quick but wrong)2. for a given solo pregnancy, we have the b-g option, or 1/2.For two pregnancies, we have bb, bg, gb, gg.for three pregnancies, we have bbb, bbg, bgb, bgg, ggg, gbg, ggb, gbb.Of which some outcomes are equivalent in terms of numbers. (e.g. ggb, gbg, bgg)However only one of the eight outcomes gives three girls, so the answer is the probablilty is 1/8.An easier method, and necessary when the number are greater, is to say the probability is 1/2 in one pregnancy.And since (for our purposes) the pregnancies are independent events, the cumulative probability is (1/2)3 which = 1/8 or 12.5% or 0.125.
No. You only halve the ingredients. You may want to reduce the time cooked, depending on the ingredients, but probably not by half.
The 8 possible outcomes for three children are: * ggg * ggb * gbg * gbb * bgg * bgb * bbg * bbb Of these, two girls and a boy occurs 3 out of 8 times, which is a probability of 0.375. This assumes that the probability of a boy and girl being in the family is equal, which is not entirely true for a large number of reasons.