There are 36 possible outcomes (6x6). There are 5 possible rolls that will give you an 8 (6+1, 5+2, 4+4. 2+5, 1+6). 5 out of 36 or 1 in 7.2
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
With two normal six-sided dice, the maximum sum can only be 12 (6 x 2 dice), so there is zero probability of rolling a sum that adds to 16.
one in sixsame for any number
Assuming these are regular dice, the probability is 1.
If they are normal dice, the probability is 0.
You can't get 14 with two regular six-sided dice ! The highest you can get with one throw is 12.
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
With two normal six-sided dice, the maximum sum can only be 12 (6 x 2 dice), so there is zero probability of rolling a sum that adds to 16.
It is 1/6.
one in sixsame for any number
Assuming these are regular dice, the probability is 1.
The probability of rolling 12 with 2 dice is 1 in 36. The probability of not rolling 12 with 2 dice is 35 in 36.
It is 0.5
It depends on the numbers on the 4 sided die. I don't believe that is a recognised standard.
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.