1. What I Would Do Is Add 2+3+5+6 Which Is 16
2. So Now You Know There Are 16 Marbles
3.Look At How Many Red And Blue Marbles There Are
4. Red=6
5.Blue=2
6. So 6+2=8
7. Your Answer Is 8/16 Or 1/2
8. So The Answer Is 8/16 Or In Simplest Form 1/2
either 4 in 52 chances or 1 in 13 chances.
The maximum number of marbles you have to draw is three. 1) Draw a marble. It is either white or black. 2) Draw a second marble. If it is the same colour as the first marble, we are done after two draws. 3) Otherwise, the drawn marbles have different colours. Draw a third marble. No matter what you draw next, you must have two marbles of the same colour.
Since each of the three colours has an equal chance of being drawn, theoretically if you draw four marbles from the bag, you should have at leas two of the same colour.However, there is a 1/3 (33.33%) chance that the first two marbles you pull out will be the same color. There is just a guarantee that you will have two of at least one color after pulling out four.
It is the process of arranging a group of selected cells in a row or column numerically or alphabetically, in either ascending or descending order.
Marbles are considered spheres, and there's a mathematical rule to define the random close-packing of spheres in a confined space. Basically:Calculate the volume of a single marble (using the formula Vmarble= 4/3πr3 to determine the volume of the sphere from its radius, which is half its diameter).Then calculate the internal volume of the jar, using the formula Vjar= πr2h for calculating the volume of a cylinder.Divide Vjar by Vmarble; then multiply by .6, as this represents how much of the space inside the jar is (probably) filled with marbles. In other words, N ≈ .6 (Vjar/Vmarble). (Obviously, N then needs to be rounded off to the nearest whole number.)Or if this is too much work, you can try counting the number of marbles at the bottom (or at the top), and then counting the number of rows there appear to be. Either way, good luck.
He will have 13 blue marbles and 10 green marbles.
He has 10 green marbles.
10 Green marbles, 13 Blue marbles.
It either floats or sinks...put the marbles in water to test them!
The probability is 0.56
a+b=23 b=a+3 a+b a+(a+3)=23 a+a=23-3 2a=20 a=10 green marbles=10 blue marbles =23-10 =13
it's the LCM of 18 and 42 18 = 2x32 42 = 2x3x7 LCM = 2x32x7 = 126
Let X = the number of green marbles. X+3 = the number of blue marbles. X + (X+3) = 23 2X + 3 = 23 2X = 20 X = 10 or the number of green marbles.
Number of possibilities for one category / Total of all possibilities. For example, if I had a bag of marbles where there are three white marbles and two black marbles. The probability of pulling out a white marble is how many white marbles are in the bag which is: three. But the total of things you can draw out of the bag can either be one of the three white marbles or one of the two black marbles. 3 white marbles+ 2 Black marbles= five marbles. Possibility is 3/5 for drawing a white marble.
Kerplunk ! I love that game. and you try to get as many sticks out without getting marbles and if you do try not to get to much because if you have the most at the end of the game you lose.
There are 2 red queens, assuming a randomly shuffled deck the chances of any one card being selected is 1 in 52, therefore the chance of either of the red queens being selected is 2 in 52. This is normally shown as 1 in 26.
A:This doesn't seem like a math question. The obvious answer is to play the game of marbles with them. When I was a boy, this was a popular game for kids. The idea is that one marble is designated as the shooter . The other marbles are placed in a ring drawn in the dirt.You place the shooter in one hand and using your thumb, shoot it at one of the marbles in the ring , trying to knock it out of the ring. if you succeed, you get a point and another shot. If you " play for keeps" each players puts a certain number of his marbles in the ring and you get to keep the marbles you knock out.There is common board game called Chinese checkers that uses marbles for men. The board has holes in it to hold the marbles.A:As far as marbles and math go, a bag containing various colored marbles is often used to demonstrate probable outcomes. For example, if a bag contains 3 blue marbles, 3 red marbles, and 1 yellow marble, what is the probability that the first two marbles pulled will be of different colors?(In this example, the odds are 5 out of 7, or about 71%. If either a red or blue marble is pulled first, which will each happen 3/7 of the time, there would be four out of six marbles left whose color doesn't match. If the yellow marble is pulled, which will happen 1/7 of the time, the next marble is guaranteed to not match.)