2nd
Select 2 cards, do not put the 1st back in the deck. This is dependent probability. The outcome of drawing the 2nd card depends on the 1st card drawn. Select a card, look at it and put it back in the deck. Select a 2nd card. These are independent of each other. One does not change the probability for selecting the 2nd.
37. The difference between the 1st and 2nd term is 5, the difference between the 2nd and 3rd term is 6, the difference between the 3rd and 4th term is 7, etc. The next term is +9 from the last term given.
the distance formula for coordinates is : d=square root of ( 2nd x coordinate minus 1st x coordinate)squared plus(2nd y coordinate minus 1st y coordinate) squared sorry if it's a little confusing
Hebrews, James, 1st Peter, 2nd Peter, 1st John, 2nd John, 3rd John, and Jude
1st baseman (to the left and up and little), 2nd baseman (between 1st base and 2nd base), or right outfielder (to the left and back).
Catcher (behind home plate) Pitcher (the guy who throws the baseball to the catcher 1st Base (stands on 1st base) 2nd base (between 2nd & 1st base) Shortstop (between 3rd & 2nd base) 3rd Base (stands on 3rd base) Left fielder (the person who is in the outfield at the left) Center Fielder (the person in the outfield between the Left and the Right fielder) Right Fielder (the person in the outfield at the right)
2nd base...
Yes. Runner on 1st has reached 2nd and eliminated the "force" out, but after overrunning the bag, he must be tagged out.
When a batted ball is put into play there is always a force out (all they have to do is touch the base) at 1st base. To have a force out at any other base, all the bases behind it must be occupied.. i.e runner on 1st and 2nd, you would have a force out at 1st, 2nd, 3rd --- runners on 1st and 3rd.. you only have a force out at 2nd and 1st, there is no force at home since nobody was on 2nd -- Also on a caught fly ball if the runner doesnt "tag up" then it is always a force out by touching the base he was on when the ball was hit -- i.e runner on 2nd base, batter hits fly ball caught by 2nd basemen.. if the runner was running, the 2nd basemen can just touch 2nd with the ball and the runner would be out --- In a situation where the defense is doing an appeal, that is also a force out
Every base is exactly 90 feet apart from the other, so it is neither further from 1st base to second base nor second base to third base.
There are a total of 9 positions for softball. You have your catcher who is behing home plate, the pitcher, 1st base, 2nd base, 3rd base, shortstop ; who is in between 2nd and 3rd, then you have right field ; behind first base, center field ; behind 2nd base and left field behind 3rd base. Hope that helped :)
Many players have played over 100 games at different positions in their careers including such notables as Babe Ruth (pitcher and outfielder), Pete Rose (2nd base, outfield, 1st base, 3rd base), Mickey Mantle (outfield and 1st base), Orlando Cepeda (outfield, 1st base), Jackie Robinson (2nd base, 1st base, 3rd base) and hundreds more.
127.28 ft ... 90' between bases, 127.28'= hypotenuse of the triangle made by home, 1st & 2nd
This is because the rules of baseball say the mound is a distance from homeplate that is less than halfway the distance between homeplate and 2nd base. The distance is the same between each base in order (the same from home to 1st, 1st to 2nd, 2nd to 3rd, 3rd to home.) This results in the distance between homeplate and 2nd equal to the distance between 1st and 3rd. If you draw a line between homeplate and 2nd, and a line between 1st and 3rd, the lines will intersect in the center of the baseball diamond. However, the center point will be behind the pitcher's mound. You can use the Pythagorean Theorem to prove the distance from the mound to home is less than the center point, but that is another question. (Hint: The distance squared from home to first plus the distance squared from first to second divided by 2).
every base is 90 feet away from each other
2nd Base