A standard die has no memory and so the probability of rolling an even number is always a half.
If you did not know that the die was standard and were using the fact that 7 out of 12 rolls were even as an empirical estimate for a loaded die then the answer is 7/12.
The probability of rolling a number less than 6 on a die would be 5/6.
The probability is 21/36 = 7/12
The probability is 1. It is a certainty that you will roll a number between and including one and six. The probability of rolling each individual number is 1/6.
4/6
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.
1/6
If the number cubes are standard dice cubes, the odds of rolling 3 ones is 1 in 216.
The first roll doesn't matter for probability, it just sets the number to be rolled by the other two. So: P(rolling the same number three times) = P(rolling a particular number)2 = (1/6)2 = 1/36
The probability of rolling a number less than 6 on a die would be 5/6.
The probability is 21/36 = 7/12
The probability is 1. It is a certainty that you will roll a number between and including one and six. The probability of rolling each individual number is 1/6.
1 out of 2
Well, if you put them back after you take them out, then 3=1/6 7=1/6 and
Because 3/6 of the sides on a number cube have even numbers, the probability of rolling even on one number cube is 1/2(equivalent of 3/6). But since you're rolling twice, you multiply the probability of one by itself (therefore rolling 2 number cubes). So: 1/2x1/2=1/4 The probability of rolling an even number when a number cube is rolled twice is 1/4, 25%, or 1 out of 4.
The theoretical probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six sided die is one in six. It does not matter how many times you roll it, however, if you roll it 300 times, the theoretical probability is that you would roll a 5 fifty times.
4/6
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.