The probability is 1 as all values on a die are less than 7.
100%
100%. Hello, 6 sided die? There is no number greater than 6, therefore no 7. This is like a Kindergarten question.
The probability is 1.
Assuming that the faces of the 20 sided die are numbered 1 to 20, then the probability of rolling a number less than 9 is 8 in 20, or 0.4.
1 out of 2
100%
The probability of rolling a number less than 1 on a standard 6-sided die is zero. It will not happen.
100%. Hello, 6 sided die? There is no number greater than 6, therefore no 7. This is like a Kindergarten question.
The probability is 1.
It depends on what size die you use, what its labels are and how many rolls you make. For example using a standard six-sided die and one roll, the probability of no sixes is 5/6 or ~0.83; the probability of no sixes with 25 rolls is less than 0.01 or 1%. If you used a standard d3 (three-sided die) then the probability will always be 1 or 100%, since rolling a six is impossible; but if every side has '6' on it the probability is 0, since every roll must be a 6.
Assuming that the faces of the 20 sided die are numbered 1 to 20, then the probability of rolling a number less than 9 is 8 in 20, or 0.4.
1 out of 2
2/3
There is a 4 in 6 (or 2 in 3) probability of rolling a number less than a five on a standard number cube.
There are six possible outcomes of rolling a six sided die.However, only two of these (1 and 2) are favorable.So, the probability of rolling less than three is 2/6 = 1/3.
I am assuming that this die is fair die and the coin is not biased. The probability of getting a number less than 3 is the probability of rolling a 1 or a 2 i.e. 1/6 + 1/6 = 2/6 which simplifies to 1/3. The probability of getting a head when you flip a fair coin is 1/2. Both are independent events, so the probability of getting a number less than 3 and getting a head is 1/3 x 1/2 = 1/6. One can get the same answer from a sample space diagram
probability is 43.3%