well it depends on what you are tossing, if its a coin then no. it can be heads too. it would have to be a great coincidence for it to be all tails, but thats why the word probability comes in meaning that there is more than one outcome
It is 0.375It is 0.375It is 0.375It is 0.375
7/8
3/18
The probability of tossing a die and getting three 6's in a row is (1/6)3, or about 0.004630.
The answer depends on what the experiment is!
2 out of 8
It is 0.375It is 0.375It is 0.375It is 0.375
Since the probability of getting tails is 50% or 0.5, the probability of three tails would be 0.5*0.5*0.5=0.125 or 12.5 %
7/8
three heads two head, one tails one heads, two tails three tails
The probability of flipping three tails with three coins is (1 in 2)3 or 1 in 8 or 0.125.
3/18
The probability of tossing a die and getting three 6's in a row is (1/6)3, or about 0.004630.
When we toss a coin getting head or tail have equal probability of 50% - that is, out of the two possible outcomes getting the specified one becomes 1/2 probability. When we toss three coins, the probability of getting all the coins showing tails is given by (1/2) * (1/2) * (1/2) equal to 1/8 or 12.5 % chance. Alikban
Assuming we want two tails exactly, the possible options to get them are: TTH, THT and HTT. They are three choices out of the eight available, which is a probability of 3/8, 0.375 or 37.5%.
The answer depends on what the experiment is!
1/4