The probability is 0. One card cannot be a club and a spade!
In a standard deck of 52 playing cards, there are 13 clubs and 13 spades. Therefore, the ratio of clubs to spades is 13:13, which simplifies to 1:1. This means that for every club in the deck, there is also one spade.
miniture shovel, or hand spade.
Well, honey, a linear meter is just a fancy way of saying a regular ol' meter. It's like calling a spade a digging utensil - same thing, different name. So yes, a linear meter is the same as a meter. Next question, please!
A label is when you are answering a word problem, for example: I have 5 chocolate bars and I gave away 2. How many do I have now? You know its 5-2=3 right? But you have to label it. So instead of saying "3" your answer would be: 3 chocolate bars. Get it? Okay great!
The probability of drawing a red spade is zero. There are no red spades in a standard deck.
Number of cards in a deck = 52 Number of cards that are spade = 13 Number of cards that are heart = 13 Probability that the card drawn is a spade and heart = 13/52 + 13/52 = 26/52 or 1/2
The probability of drawing a spade from a standard deck of 52 cards is 13 in 52, or 1 in 4, or 0.25.
The probability of NOT drawing a spade from a standard deck of cards is 75 is an example of a mistated question - a standard deck of cards is 52, not 75.
1/4
The answer depends on how many cards are drawn. If you draw 40 cards, the probability is 0. The probability of not drawing a spade in a random draw of one card from a standard deck is 39/52 = 3/4.
It is 1/169 or 0.0059, approx.
The probability is 0.4231, approx.
The probability of drawing a spade or an ace from a 52 card deck of standard playing cards is 16 / 52 or approximately 30.8%. There are 13 spades in a standard deck of cards. There are four aces in a standard deck of cards. One of the aces is a spade. So, 13 + 4 - 1 = 16 spades or aces to choose from. Since we have a total of 52 cards, the probability of selecting an ace or a spade is 16 / 52 or approximately 30.8%.
The probability of drawing a jack is 4 in 52. The probability of drawing a spade is 13 in 52. The probability of drawing a jack or a spade is 4 + 13 - 1 in 52, with the -1 compensating for one of the jacks also being a spade. 4 + 13 - 1 in 52 is 16 in 52, which is also 4 in 13, or about 0.3077.
The probability of drawing a spade in a standard 52 card deck is 13 in 52, or 1 in 4. The probability of drawing a second spade, assuming the first spade was not replaced back into the deck, is 12 in 51. The probability, then, of drawing two spades is the product of those two probabilities, or 12 in 204, or 1 in 17.
1 in 4. Because there are 4 suits of cards.