1
One in Six
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.
It's deduction. You can find the odds of something happening by first finding out the odds of that something not happening. That is converse probability. For instance the odds of rolling a "3" on a 6 sided die. Using converse probability would be 5/6 (5 sides are not the number "3"). 6/6 (six sides in all) - 5/6 = 1/6 is the odds of rolling that "3".
4/6 = 2/3
2/3 or 66.6666666667%-Nicci4 out of 6 chances-Snoady
Since there are six sides on a die, the odds of rolling a 4, or any digit for that matter is 1/6
5/6
0.5
if you rollid a die once the odds of getting less than four would be 3/6 or 50%.
The probability of rolling a number greater than 1 is 5/6.
1
50%
On a single die it is 1 in 6.
The probability of rolling the same number six times on a standard die is (1 in 6)5 or 1 in 7776, or about 0.0001286. The reason the exponent above is five instead of six is that the probability of rolling "some" number on one die is 1, so you need to look at the probability of the other five dice matching the first die. It would not matter if you rolled one die six times, or six dice one time. The odds are the same.
1 out of 6
The probability of rolling a 1 on a die is 1/6 if you roll it once.