number of queen card = 4 number of cards in a deck of cards = 52 Probability of getting a queen card = 4/52 or 1/13
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.
It is 3/4.
4/13
The probability of drawing a queen, from a 52 card deck, is 4/52 or 1/13.
The probability of drawing the queen of hearts is 1 in 52, or about 0.01923.
number of queen card = 4 number of cards in a deck of cards = 52 Probability of getting a queen card = 4/52 or 1/13
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.
It is 3/4.
4/13
13/204
13/52 = 1/4
The probability of getting a king in a one card draw from a deck of 52 cards is .077 or 1 chance in 13. The probability of getting a king and one other specific denomination, such as a queen, is .154, or one chance in between 6 and 7.
The probability of drawing a queen, from a 52 card deck, is 4/52 or 1/13.
3/52*13/51+1/52*12/51= .01923
The probability of getting a particular suit (hearts, spades, diamonds, clubs) is 1 in 4. The probability of getting a card less than 8 (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) is 6 in 13. The probability, then, of getting a particular suit less than 8 is (1 in 4) times (6 in 13) or 6 in 52 or 3 in 26.
The answer will depend on the exact situation.If you are dealt a single card, the probability of that single card not being a queen is 12/13 - assuming you have no knowledge about the other cards.Here is another example. If you already hold three queens in your hand (and no other cards have been dealt), the probability of the next card being dealt being a queen is 1/49, so the probability of NOT getting a queen is 48/49 - higher than in the previous example.