5/6 0.833333333 ect. 83%
The probability of rolling a number greater than 6 on a die is 0.
The probability of rolling an odd number on a standard die is 3 in 6, or 1 in 2, or 0.5.
Rolling a number greater than 4
It is 0.5
The factors of 10 are the numbers that divide 10 evenly: 1, 2, 5 and 10. To answer your question, you have to figure out what the probability of rolling one of these numbers is on a number cube.
The probability of rolling a number greater than 6 on a die is 0.
The probability of rolling an odd number on a standard die is 3 in 6, or 1 in 2, or 0.5.
1/3
1 out of 2
1/3
The probability is 6/36 or 1/6
It is a half, one out of 2 or 50:50
The theoretical probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six sided die is one in six. It does not matter how many times you roll it, however, if you roll it 300 times, the theoretical probability is that you would roll a 5 fifty times.
The experimental probability of anything cannot be answered without doing it, because that is what experimental probability is - the probability that results from conducting an experiment, a posteri. This is different than theoretical probability, which can be computed a priori. For instance, the theoretical probability of rolling an even number is 3 in 6, or 1 in 2, or 0.5, but the experimental probability changes every time you run the experiment.
The probability of rolling a number greater than 1 is 5/6.
Rolling a number greater than 4
The probability of getting tails on a coin is SMALLER than rolling a number greater than 2