Each die can come up in 6 ways.
You get exactly 2 only if both dice come up as a ' 1 '.
The probability of the first one coming up '1' is (1/6).
The probability of the second one coming up as a '1' is (1/6).
The probability of both coming up as '1' is (1/6 x 1/6) = (1/36) = 2.78% (rounded)
It is 1/6.
When rolling one die, the probability of getting a 4 is 1 in 6, or 0.1667. If two dice are rolled, you get two unrelated chances of rolling at least one 4, so the probability is 2 in 6, or 0.3333.
Two standard dice cannot have a sum greater than 12. The probability, then, of getting a sum greater than 15 is zero.
These are independent one has no bearing on the other
If you rolled 2 fair dice, the probability of having a sum of 6 is 5 over 36
If they are normal dice, the probability is 0.
Assuming these are regular dice, the probability is 1.
The probability of rolling 12 with 2 dice is 1 in 36. The probability of not rolling 12 with 2 dice is 35 in 36.
The probability is 1, if the dice are rolled often enough.
The probability is 8/36 or 2/9
1/12 or .083
1/12
It is 1/6.
When rolling one die, the probability of getting a 4 is 1 in 6, or 0.1667. If two dice are rolled, you get two unrelated chances of rolling at least one 4, so the probability is 2 in 6, or 0.3333.
Zero. The minimum value of two dice being rolled is two.
35 in 36, or about 0.9722
Probability that the sum is 6 = 5/36 Probability that the sum is 7 = 6/36