If you rolled 2 fair dice, the probability of having a sum of 6 is 5 over 36
The probability that the sum of the numbers rolled is either even or a multiple of 5 is 11/18.
It is 1/6.
You can't get 14 with two regular six-sided dice ! The highest you can get with one throw is 12.
Due to the incompatibility of the grammar: "one" and "are", the question makes no sense and so it is not possible to answer it.
If you rolled 2 fair dice, the probability of having a sum of 6 is 5 over 36
It is 0.9459
If it lands on a six 140 times then the estimated probability of a six is 140/400 = 0.35
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
The probability that the sum of the numbers rolled is either even or a multiple of 5 is 11/18.
It is 1/6.
It is 0.347, approx.
If you're only rolling one die, it's a probability of 1 out of six, or 16.67%.
You can't get 14 with two regular six-sided dice ! The highest you can get with one throw is 12.
You roll it many times. The probability that it lands on a six is the number of times that it lands on a six divided by the number of times the die has been rolled.
The answer depends on the experiment: how many coins are tossed, how often, how many dice are rolled, how often.
With two normal six-sided dice, the maximum sum can only be 12 (6 x 2 dice), so there is zero probability of rolling a sum that adds to 16.