It depends what you consider favorable. There are 6 possible outcomes of a single roll of a 6-sided die.
The outcome space.
When you roll a fair 6 sided die it is no harder to roll a six than a four. Each possible outcome has the same probability. That is the definition of "fair".
It depends on the number of sides and how many times you roll it.
With a single throw of a normal die, the probability is 0.With a single throw of a normal die, the probability is 0.With a single throw of a normal die, the probability is 0.With a single throw of a normal die, the probability is 0.
It depends what you consider favorable. There are 6 possible outcomes of a single roll of a 6-sided die.
The outcome space.
If zero is the number on one of the 9 sides, then the probability is 8/9 = 88.9% (rounded)If zero is not the number on any one of the 9 sides, then the probability is 100%.
When you roll a fair 6 sided die it is no harder to roll a six than a four. Each possible outcome has the same probability. That is the definition of "fair".
If you were really unlucky, infinitely many times! The probability of that happening is very tiny but it is not zero.
The probability of rolling a 4 when you throw once a fair die is: P(4) = 1/6.The probability of not rolling a 4 when you throw once a fair die is: P(NO 4) = 5/6.If you roll a fair die four times, the probability of rolling a four on only the secondthrow is:P(NO 4, 4, NO 4, NO 4) = (5/6)(1/6)(5/6)(5/6) = 0.096450617... ≈ 9.6%
It is a certainty - if you roll the die often enough. And on one roll it is impossible. Unfortunately you have chosen not to specify how many times the die is rolled, and without that crucial bit of information, it is not possible to give a more helpful answer.
Six on a single roll, 6k on k rolls.
Assuming that the die is a regular 1 - 6 die, there is zero chance of you throwing an eight with a single six-sided die.
It is 1/36 since each outcome is equally likely.
It depends on the number of sides and how many times you roll it.
Probability of zero means that there is no chance that the event will happen. First example that comes to mind: What is the probability of rolling a 7 on one roll of a standard six-sided die. Well you can't, so the probability of this happening is zero.