The probability of drawing a red heart is 1 in 4. This is the same as the probability of drawing a heart, as red is included as a superset of hearts.
The probability of drawing a heart from a fair deck is 1 in 4. If the card is replaced then the probability is again 1 in 4. The probability of drawing a card other than a heart is 3 in 4. Once again if the card is replaced then the probability remains 3 in 4
The probability of drawing 3 hearts in a row in a 52 card deck is 13/52 * 12/51 * 11/50 = 1716/132600 = 0.01294, or approximately 1 chance in 77.
In order to determine the probability of drawing 2 hearts and then a spade, in that order, from a deck of 52 cards, start by considering the first card. The probability of drawing a heart is 1 in 4. Since you have now reduced the number of hearts and the number of cards in the deck by one, the probability of drawing another heart is 4 in 17. Since you have further reduced the number of cards by one, the probability of drawing a spade is 13 in 50. Multiply these probabilities together, (1/4) (4/17) (13/50), and you get about 0.0153, or about 153 in 10000.
It is 4/13.
The probability of drawing the queen of hearts is 1 in 52, or about 0.01923.
The probability of drawing the Five of Hearts from a standard deck of 52 cards is 1 in 52, or about 0.01923.
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.
The probability of drawing a red heart is 1 in 4. This is the same as the probability of drawing a heart, as red is included as a superset of hearts.
The probability of drawing a heart from a fair deck is 1 in 4. If the card is replaced then the probability is again 1 in 4. The probability of drawing a card other than a heart is 3 in 4. Once again if the card is replaced then the probability remains 3 in 4
The probability of drawing 3 hearts in a row in a 52 card deck is 13/52 * 12/51 * 11/50 = 1716/132600 = 0.01294, or approximately 1 chance in 77.
The probability of drawing a Queen of Hearts from a standard deck is 1 in 52, or about 0.01923. The probability of drawing a blue card from a standard deck is zero, because there are no blue cards. Simply add them together 0.01923 + 0 = 0.01923.
The probability of getting two hearts in a row: P(Getting a hearts on the first draw)*P(Getting another hearts given the first one was a hearts) The first probability is simple: there are 13 hearts in a deck of 52 cards. The probability is 13/52=1/4. The second probability is trickier: there are now 12 hearts left in a deck of 51 cards! The probability of getting another hearts is therefore 12/51=4/17. Now compute (1/4)*(4/17) and get 1/17, which is the probability of drawing two hearts from a deck of fifty-two playing cards.
In order to determine the probability of drawing 2 hearts and then a spade, in that order, from a deck of 52 cards, start by considering the first card. The probability of drawing a heart is 1 in 4. Since you have now reduced the number of hearts and the number of cards in the deck by one, the probability of drawing another heart is 4 in 17. Since you have further reduced the number of cards by one, the probability of drawing a spade is 13 in 50. Multiply these probabilities together, (1/4) (4/17) (13/50), and you get about 0.0153, or about 153 in 10000.
It is 4/13.
The probability of drawing the Ace of Hearts from a standard deck of 52 cards is 1 in 52. The probability of then drawing the Ace of Diamonds is then 1 in 51. Multiply these two probabilities together, and you get 1 in 2652, or about 0.0003771.The probability of drawing the ace of hearts from a deck before drawing the ace of diamonds, ignoring any other cards, is 1/2.Note: Both of these answers are correct. It depends on your point of view. They've been left so that you, dear reader, can think about it.
Oh, dude, the probability of drawing 2 hearts from a deck of cards is like 1 out of 13 for the first card, and then 12 out of 51 for the second card. So, if you multiply those together, you get about a 4.5% chance of pulling off that heartwarming feat. But hey, who's counting, right?