It is 8/13.
Given that it is a king, the probability that it is a face card is 100%. All Kings are face cards.
The probability of drawing a queen or king, in a single randomly drawn card, is 2/13. The probability of drawing one when you draw 45 cards without replacement is 1. The probability of choosing has nothing t do with the probability of drawing the card. I can choose a king but fail to find one!
The probability of drawing a king is 4:52The probability of drawing a diamond is 13:52 (or 1:4)The probability of drawing a king (0.07692...) then replacing that king into the deck then drawing a diamond is 0.019230769.If you leave the king out, the probability will be slightly greater (4/52) * (13/51)Unless the king you left out of the deck was a king of diamonds, in which case, the probability would be (4/52) * (12/51)
The probability of drawing a king and a queen from a standard 52 card deck is 32 in 2652, or 8 in 663, or about 0.012066. The first king or queen is 8 in 52. The second card is 4 in 51. Simply multiply 8/52 by 4/51.
It is 8/13.
Given that it is a king, the probability that it is a face card is 100%. All Kings are face cards.
There are 6 red face cards in a standard deck of 52 cards; the Jack, Queen, and King of Hearts and Diamonds. The probability, then, of drawing a red face card from a standard deck of 52 cards is 6 in 52, or 3 in 26, or about 0.1154.
The probability of drawing a queen or king, in a single randomly drawn card, is 2/13. The probability of drawing one when you draw 45 cards without replacement is 1. The probability of choosing has nothing t do with the probability of drawing the card. I can choose a king but fail to find one!
The probability of drawing a king of hearts from a regular deck of cards is 1 in 52 because there is only one king of hearts in the standard 52 card deck.
1/4
The probability of drawing a king or a nine from a standard deck of 52 cards is (4 + 4) in 52, or 8 in 52, or 2 in 13, or about 0.1538.
There are 40 cards that are NOT jacks, queens, or kings, so the probability of drawing one of these cards is 40/52 = 10/13 = 0.769
The probability of drawing a king is 4:52The probability of drawing a diamond is 13:52 (or 1:4)The probability of drawing a king (0.07692...) then replacing that king into the deck then drawing a diamond is 0.019230769.If you leave the king out, the probability will be slightly greater (4/52) * (13/51)Unless the king you left out of the deck was a king of diamonds, in which case, the probability would be (4/52) * (12/51)
8/52
The probability of drawing a king and a queen from a standard 52 card deck is 32 in 2652, or 8 in 663, or about 0.012066. The first king or queen is 8 in 52. The second card is 4 in 51. Simply multiply 8/52 by 4/51.
If only two cards are drawn from a standard deck of cards, with the first card replaced before drawing the second, the answer is 0.005917 (approx). If the first card is not replaced, the probability increases to 0.006033.