There are 2 red queens, assuming a randomly shuffled deck the chances of any one card being selected is 1 in 52, therefore the chance of either of the red queens being selected is 2 in 52. This is normally shown as 1 in 26.
There are 4 Queens in a pack of 52 playing cards.
There are 52 cards in a deck, and 4 suits of 13 cards each.So the probability is 1/13 = 0.077
The odds are 1:13 - since there are 52 cards, and 4 queens in each pack.
12 out of 52, 3 out of 13, or about 23%
The probability of drawing a red queen in a complete package of playing cards (ignoring jokers) is 1/26 or approximately 3.8%. There are 26 red cards in a deck of 52 cards. There are 2 red queens in those 26 red cards (one queen of diamonds and one queen of hearts). SO: 2 / 52 = 1 / 26 = approximately 3.8%.
1/13
depends on the amount of black cards there is in the pack
you have a 1/13 chance of getting an ace in a pack of cards
There are 4 Queens in a pack of 52 playing cards.
only one~
Assuming you count the jack & king picture cards as 11 & 13 respectively, the odds are 7:6 in favour of an odd card.
No, only the king, queen, and jack are face cards.
4 out of 52
A standard pack of Playing cards has 13 cards of each suit. There are 13 club cards in a deck (Ace-10, Jack, Queen, King).
13 out of 52
Assuming there are no Joker cards the chance is one in twenty six. There are fifty two cards in a pack and only two of them are black kings.
Assuming there are no Joker cards the chance is one in twenty six. There are fifty two cards in a pack and only two of them are black kings.