The global gender probability, at birth, is approx 0.517 for male and 0.483 for female. This is not the same as the gender ratio at conception because of gender-specific abortion.
it depends on how much sexual intercourse you have. it is up to you.
Approximately, it is one half.
1/2
The "23 math problem," often referred to as the "birthday problem," explores the probability that in a group of 23 people, at least two individuals share the same birthday. Surprisingly, the probability is over 50%, despite the seemingly low number of people. This counterintuitive result arises from the numerous possible pairings of birthdays among the group. The problem illustrates how human intuition can be misleading when it comes to probability.
No. Woman is a noun (a female adult human). The word "womanly" is usually an adjective, but can be an adverb.
51%..
It is approx 0.48
1/2.
It is approx 0.4831
50% because the male and female would both have the chance
50%, or half. Therefore, there is an equal chance that the offspring will be female.
it depends on how much sexual intercourse you have. it is up to you.
They will not. In recent years probability is less than 50%. The latest estimate is 48%
Human genes have a probability of 0.5, or 50% of being male or female. Genes are just naturally designed this way.
The male to female human sex ratio varies, due to demographics, environment, sex deterministic abortion, and imbalance in the male/female sperm viability ratio. The secondary ratio of boys to girls is about 105 to 100, or about 0.525 male. Estimates of the current birth sex ratio is about 0.535 male. The current global sex ratio (population) is about 0.507 male (2010) to 0.508 male (projected 2011).
That depends on many factors. For example, if you are a $1 bill, the probability is quite high, whereas if you are a human being, the probability is quite low.
50% chance