The answer depends on how many cards are drawn, whether that is with or without replacement, whether the cards are drawn at random. If only one card is drawn, the probability is 0. If 51 cards are drawn, the probability is 1.
If two cards are drawn, at random, and the first is not replaced, the probability is
(2/52)*(1/51) = 2/2652 = 0.00075, approx.
There are 4 kings and 4 queens in a deck of 52 cards. The chance of drawing a king is 4 in 52 (or .077 in probability terms). The probability to draw either a king or a queen will be twice as high (.154)
1/4
There are 13 clubs in a deck of 52 cards. The probability of drawing 1 club from a deck of 52 is 13/52 or 1/4.
The answer depends on how many cards are drawn. If you draw 40 cards, the probability is 0. The probability of not drawing a spade in a random draw of one card from a standard deck is 39/52 = 3/4.
Aprox. 0.018%There are 4 queens in a regular deck of 52 cards.The probability of drawing a queen on the first draw is: P(Q1) = 4/52.The probability of drawing a queen on the second draw given that the first card wasa queen is: P(Q2│Q1) = 3/51.The probability of drawing a queen on the third draw given that the first two cardswere queens is: P(Q3│(Q2UQ1)) = 2/50.The probability of drawing 3 queens on the first 3 cards drawn from a deck of cardsis: P(Q1UQ2UQ3) = (4/52)∙(3/51)∙(2/50) = 1.80995... x 10-4 ≈ 0.00018 ≈ 0.018%
there should only be 4 queens in a deck of cards so 0.0%
It is approx 0.009050
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 pair from a standard deck of 52 cards is 3 in 51, or 1 in 17, or about 0.0588.
The probability of drawing a red queen in a complete package of playing cards (ignoring jokers) is 1/26 or approximately 3.8%. There are 26 red cards in a deck of 52 cards. There are 2 red queens in those 26 red cards (one queen of diamonds and one queen of hearts). SO: 2 / 52 = 1 / 26 = approximately 3.8%.
Considering there is 52 cards in a deck and 4 queens.... That would be the probability of 4 out of 52... 4/52 = 1/13 ~0,077
There are 4 kings and 4 queens in a deck of 52 cards. The chance of drawing a king is 4 in 52 (or .077 in probability terms). The probability to draw either a king or a queen will be twice as high (.154)
The odds are 1:13 - since there are 52 cards, and 4 queens in each pack.
1/4
There are 13 clubs in a deck of 52 cards. The probability of drawing 1 club from a deck of 52 is 13/52 or 1/4.
The answer depends on how many cards are drawn. If you draw 40 cards, the probability is 0. The probability of not drawing a spade in a random draw of one card from a standard deck is 39/52 = 3/4.
The probability of drawing three queens from a deck of cards is (4 in 52) times (3 in 51) times (2 in 50), or 24 in 132,600 or 1 in 5,525.