The odds are 1 in 36 that you will roll a sum of 2 in a single roll of two fair dice.
6
1 in 6. Basically dice 1 can roll any number So the odds are that dice 2 has the same number as dice 1, or 1 in 6
The possibilities are 2, 4 and 6 which are all multiples of two. So the odds are 50:50
1 in 23328
The odds are 1 in 36 that you will roll a sum of 2 in a single roll of two fair dice.
6
1 in 6. Basically dice 1 can roll any number So the odds are that dice 2 has the same number as dice 1, or 1 in 6
The possibilities are 2, 4 and 6 which are all multiples of two. So the odds are 50:50
1 in 23328
Of the 36 possible combinations rolling two dice there are 2 combinations that add up to 11 so the odds are 18:1
6 of 12 a 50% percent chance
there is a probability of 1/6.Answer:For two dice to show 5 and 2:There are two ways to roll a "good" number (2 or 5) for the first dice. This gives odds of 2/6.For the second dice there is one way to role a good number ( 1 in 6)The odds to roll both a 2 and a 5 are (2/6)x(1/6) or 2/36 or 1/18.
The odds of rolling 6 out of 2 consecutive dice is 100/25.
No you can decide if you want to roll one or 2 of the dice.
The odds of one die being any number is 1 in 1. The odds of any of the next seven dice being the same as the first die is 1 in 6. The odds of the last two being different than the first die is 5 in 6. The dice are unrelated to each other, and it does not matter in what order they are thrown, so the odds of eight matching dice out of ten dice is (1 in 1)1 (1 in 6)7 (5 in 6)2, or 25 in 10,077,696.
I believe the odds are about 60:1