probability of tails on a coin is 1/2 probablility of 6 on a die is 1/6
1/12 (1/6 chance of a 5 * 1/2 chance of getting tails)
the probability of getting one head and one tail on three flips of a coin is 1/9
The probability of getting two tails when tossing a coin is zero, because the coin can only have one result. If, one the other hand, you toss the coin twice, then the probability of getting two tails is 0.25, i.e. the probability of one tail, 0.5, squared.
if you flip a coin once, the chance it will be heads is 50%
The probability is still 50%
It is (1/2)*(1/6) = 1/12
Probability of getting a head or tail is not equal
1/12 (1/6 chance of a 5 * 1/2 chance of getting tails)
the probability of getting one head and one tail on three flips of a coin is 1/9
The probability is 50-50.
1/2. There is an equal chance of the coin falling head up or tail up.
One in six
It is 3/8.
The prime numbers from 1-6 are 2, 3, 5 (1 is not prime). There are 3 prime numbers on a dice and 6 total. therefore the probability of rolling a prime is 3/6. The probability of getting a tails when flipping a coin is 1/2. Therefore you just multiply the two. 3/6 * 1/2 = 1/4
The probability of getting two tails when tossing a coin is zero, because the coin can only have one result. If, one the other hand, you toss the coin twice, then the probability of getting two tails is 0.25, i.e. the probability of one tail, 0.5, squared.
75%. There are 3 possible ways of getting at least one tail from 2 tosses from a coin:Tail & Tail orHead & Tail orTail & HeadEach of these individual outcomes has a probability of 25% (e.g. the probability of getting a tail and then another tail is 25%). Adding the possible outcomes together gives you a total of 75%.
The probability of getting a head or a tail is, for all practical purposes, equal to 1. The only other possibility is that the coin stands on its edge - technically possible but so very unlikely that it can safely be ignored.