According to the American CIA, worldwide the number of boys born to the number of girls is 1.07:1, which implies a probability of about 0.517. This varies somewhat by country, for instance. At one extreme, according to the list of countries by sex ratio presented in wikipedia is Liechtenstein at 0.558, at the other Haiti at 0.503.
1 in 2 children born will be male.
Nowadays it is approximately 0.5169
The probability of having a male or female baby is generally considered to be roughly equal, with about a 50% chance for each gender. While biological factors can influence this ratio slightly, the overall probability in large populations tends to balance out to close to 1:1. Therefore, for any individual pregnancy, the chance is approximately 50% for a male and 50% for a female.
To determine the probability of selecting a family with exactly 3 male children out of 4, we can use the binomial probability formula. The probability of having a male child is typically considered to be 0.5 (assuming an equal likelihood of male and female). The probability of exactly 3 males in 4 children is calculated as ( P(X = 3) = \binom{4}{3} (0.5)^3 (0.5)^1 = 4 \times 0.125 \times 0.5 = 0.25 ). Thus, the probability is 0.25 or 25%.
please help iam adding mixed numbers 2 1/3+3 2/3=
1 in 2 children born will be male.
50% then 25%
1 in 2
50%
In most industrialized countries there are about 105 boys born for every 100 girls. This number does change so it is NOT constant, but it gives you a rough idea. so 105+100=205 AND 105/205 =.512195 which is the probability of being born male.
Nowadays it is approximately 0.5169
a male baby = tinok (?????) a female baby = tinoket (??????) a male child = yeled (???) a female child = yaldah (????)
Approx 1/2, except that while it is in the womb, it is not a baby!
if the male is a crack addict can the sperm cause the baby to be a crack baby
The sex of a child is determined by male sperm. There are only two sexes, so there is an equal (50-50) chance of having a boy or girl.
50%
No it is not possible for a male child to have a father that died three years before he was born. It takes nine months for the mother to carry and have the baby delivered in the maternity ward.