When you are asked what is the probability of drawing "thing a" when you have only the same amount of "thing b," is called an equally likely event. For example: In a hat you have 8 black marbles and 8 black marbles. Since there the same amount of both, the chance of picking a black marble is 50% and picking a blue marble is 50%. This is an equally likely event.
No, the math term ratio doesn't mean multiply.
the mean
mean: average
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When you are asked what is the probability of drawing "thing a" when you have only the same amount of "thing b," is called an equally likely event. For example: In a hat you have 8 black marbles and 8 black marbles. Since there the same amount of both, the chance of picking a black marble is 50% and picking a blue marble is 50%. This is an equally likely event.
No, the math term ratio doesn't mean multiply.
A prime number is a number that can only be equally divided by 2 integers 1 and itself
it is a math term
the mean
its the answer.
The likely term is the transposition "singular system" (math term).
mean: average
One way of describing a fair trial in statistics is one in which the probability of each outcome is what might be expected on theoretical grounds. A coin, that can only land on two faces, is equally likely to land on either one. A cubic die that is equally likely to show any one of its six faces and so on.
outside
average
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