The probability that she gets exactly 3 right is 8C3*(1/3)3*(2/3)5 = 0.2731 approx.
If there are four possible answers to a question, then a guessed answer would have a probability of 1 in 4. If there are six questions, then the mean number of correct answers would be six times 1 in 4, or 1.5
25
Componential/Analytical intelligence
You question is badly composed can you rephrase for clarity in order to get answers
No the they are copyrighted.Yes indeed it would be possible to answer the questions once they have been submitted.
The probability will depend on how much you know and the extent of guessing.
.237 or about 24 %
If there are four possible answers to a question, then a guessed answer would have a probability of 1 in 4. If there are six questions, then the mean number of correct answers would be six times 1 in 4, or 1.5
1/5 or 0.2
The probability of correct true & false question is 1/2 and the probability correct multiple choice (four answer) question is 1/4. We want the probability of correct, correct, and correct. Therefore the probability all 3 questions correct is 1/2 * 1/2 * 1/4 = 1/16.
Probability of each question correct is 1/4 or 0.25. Since there are 5 questions, raise 0.25 to the 5th power or (0.25)5. So, probability all correct is 0.0009765.
The odds of getting 100 percent on a 10 question multiple choice test with 2 possible answers for each question can be calculated using the probability formula. Since there are 2 options for each question, the probability of getting a question right by guessing is 1/2 or 0.5. To calculate the probability of getting all 10 questions correct by guessing, you would multiply the probability of getting each question right (0.5) by itself 10 times, resulting in a probability of (0.5)^10, which is approximately 0.0009765625 or 0.09765625%.
There is 1 right answer out of 5 possible answers, so the probability of guessing it correctly is 1/5 or 20% or 0.2.
The probability of getting both answers correct is one chance in nine (0.1111+). There are three possible answers for each question, so there is a 1/3 chance of getting the correct answer to one question. To get the correct answer for both questions, the chances are 1/3 x 1/3 or 1/9.
64/256
Multiple-choice questions only work when the list of possible answers is included.
Multiple-choice questions only work when given the list of possible answers.