1 chance in 10.
10 %
There are 15 blue marbles, 8 yellow marbles and 27 red marbles for a total of 50 marbles. Since there are no green marbles in the lot, It is impossible to pull a green marble from the lot. The is no probability whatsoever! "There just ain't no green ones to pull."
To find the experimental probability of choosing a green marble, first calculate the total number of marbles: 7 red + 9 yellow + 14 green + 10 purple = 40 marbles. The probability of choosing a green marble is the number of green marbles divided by the total number of marbles, which is 14 green / 40 total = 0.35. Thus, the experimental probability of choosing a green marble is 0.35, or 35%.
Total number of marbles in the bag = 6 + 19 + 5 + 19 + 17 = 66Number of yellow ones = 19If drawing perfectly randomly, then the probability of pulling a yellow one = 19/66 = 28.8% (rounded)
It depends on how many yellow-green marbles there are, and on how many total marbles there are. There is insufficient information in the question to answer it. Please restate the question, giving this other information.
There are 8 marbles that aren't black, out of a total of 12 marbles, so the probability is 8/12 or 2/3.
There are 15 blue marbles, 8 yellow marbles and 27 red marbles for a total of 50 marbles. Since there are no green marbles in the lot, It is impossible to pull a green marble from the lot. The is no probability whatsoever! "There just ain't no green ones to pull."
1 in 52
0No blue marbles in the bag.
Total number of marbles in the bag = 6 + 19 + 5 + 19 + 17 = 66Number of yellow ones = 19If drawing perfectly randomly, then the probability of pulling a yellow one = 19/66 = 28.8% (rounded)
It depends on how many yellow-green marbles there are, and on how many total marbles there are. There is insufficient information in the question to answer it. Please restate the question, giving this other information.
5/15 = 1/3 = 33 and 1/3 percent
The theoretical probability of randomly drawing a green marble can be calculated by dividing the number of green marbles by the total number of marbles in the bag. In this case, there are 12 green marbles out of a total of 5 red marbles + 8 blue marbles + 12 green marbles, which is 25 marbles in total. Therefore, the theoretical probability of drawing a green marble is 12/25 or 48%.
3/16
To calculate the probability of not drawing two green marbles, we first find the probability of drawing a green marble on the first draw, which is 5/20 since there are 5 green marbles out of a total of 20 marbles. The probability of not drawing a green marble on the first draw is 1 - 5/20 = 15/20. Since the marbles are replaced, the probability of not drawing a green marble on the second draw is also 15/20. Therefore, the probability of not drawing two green marbles is (15/20) * (15/20) = 225/400 = 9/16 or 56.25%.
There are 8 marbles that aren't black, out of a total of 12 marbles, so the probability is 8/12 or 2/3.
If you pull 35 marbles without replacement, the answer is 1: the event is a certainty. If you pull only one marble, at random, the probability is 16/50 = 8/25.
Three sixteenths, or 19%.