With a normal 6-sided die the probability would be 2/6, or 1/3.
Assuming a fair die and only one roll, the probability is 1/6.
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
2/12
1 out of 6 times,or 16.67% probability.
With a normal 6-sided die the probability would be 2/6, or 1/3.
When you roll a 6 sided die there are 6 possible outcomes. 1,2,3,4,5,6. Out of these 3 are multiples of 2. Therefore the Probability of getting a multiple of 2 is (3/6) which simplifies to (1/2) or a half.
Assuming a fair die and only one roll, the probability is 1/6.
2/12 or 1/6
The probability of getting an odd number when you roll one die is 1 in 2. In order to get an odd sum with two dice, one of them has to be odd and one of them has to be even. The probability of rolling an odd sum is still 1 in 2, since each die is unrelated in probability to the other.
On a single roll of a fair, six-sided die, it is 1/2.
2 in 6, or 1 in 3, or about 0.3333.
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
Assuming you are talking about fair, six-sided dice, then the probability of rolling a 1 on the first roll in 1/6, and the probability of rolling a 2 on the second roll is 1/6. Putting these together, the probability of rolling 1 on the first die and 2 on the second die is 1/36. If you do not care about the order, then you could roll 1,2 or 2,1; in this case the probability would be 2/36, or 1/18.
In one roll the probability is 1/36.
2/12
Two thirds (2/3)