1/6
The numerator is the number of outcomes you would find acceptable (in this case ONLY the number 2)
The denominator is the number of all possible outcomes (6)
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 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.
The chance is 9%