There is a one out of four chance of having both dice even numbers.
It is 10/36 = 5/18
Rolling one die, it is 1/6. Rolling two dice, it is 2/6, which can be simplified to 1/3 or 33.33%.
The answer depends on what "rolling a one" refers to.rolling a sum of one,rolling a difference of one,rolling a product of one,rolling a one on one die only,rolling a one on one or both dice.Unfortunately these probabilities are different and the question is ambiguous.
9 out of 12 chance of that happening
You have 1 out of 6 chance of getting a two.
It is not!
1 chance in 12 tries
There is a one out of four chance of having both dice even numbers.
It is 10/36 = 5/18
Rolling one die, it is 1/6. Rolling two dice, it is 2/6, which can be simplified to 1/3 or 33.33%.
The answer depends on what "rolling a one" refers to.rolling a sum of one,rolling a difference of one,rolling a product of one,rolling a one on one die only,rolling a one on one or both dice.Unfortunately these probabilities are different and the question is ambiguous.
The only way to get a 12 is to get two sixes. The chance of rolling a six is 1/6 and chance of rolling two sixes is 1/36 or about 2.78%
9 out of 12 chance of that happening
It depends on "rolling a sum of 1" with what. One die, two dice or more?
The chance is 9%
The probability of throwing just one one with two dice can be calculated by considering the different ways it can occur. There are two ways to get one one: rolling a one on the first die and any number on the second die, or rolling any number on the first die and a one on the second die. There are a total of 36 possible outcomes when rolling two dice, so the probability is 2/36, which simplifies to 1/18.