none.
There are a few options that are available to see betting odds. This would greatly depend on what odds one is interested in viewing, but one can find betting odds on sites such as Odds Checker, Odds Portal and Odds Shark.
Odds ratio (AD/BC) is the ratio between number of times that something happens and does not happen. Crude odds ratio is the ratio that is not stratified (ex. by age). Adjusted odds ratio is a stratified odds ratio. If the odds ratio equals one, then there is no association, and null hypothesis shall be accepted. If one is included into confidence interval, then it is possible that odds ratio equals one, and it is not statistically significant. If stratified odds ratios are about the same, or there are no significant differences, the odds ratios are combined into one common odds summary estimate of two stratum specific ORs using Mantel-Haenszel and/or Cohran's tests, or multivariable analysis.
The odds of not selecting a queen of hearts is 51 in 52.
Odds of rolling ONE six - 6:1 Odds of rolling TWO sixes - 36:1 Odds of rolling two sixes, SIX times - 216:1
The odds against drawing a black 7 is 25 in 26.
None
You should not be able to get pregnant by a man who has had a vasectomy.
The vasectomy should make him completely infertile; no pregnancy will result.
A Vasectomy procedure will cost about $1,300 to any man not wanting to have children any longer if the procedure is done by the Houston Vasectomy Clinic.
No. The man's body is his own, to do with what he wants. No spousal permission, formal or otherwise, is needed for him to have a vasectomy.
The odds are extremely, extremely low. First, a vasectomy literally cuts the tubes in half that the sperm would normally flow out of. If the sperm can't get out of the man, it can't get into the woman. Second, having your tubes tied means your eggs can't get into your uterus, and sperm can't get through to the eggs anyways. So, all that would happen is his spermless seminal fluid would enter your eggless uterus and nothing would happen.
you might get pregnant from sleeping with the man that could get you preggo.
vasectomy
A man that has had a vasectomy does not release sperm, however, he does ejaculate.
A vasectomy severs the vas deferens, preventing sperm from entering the man's ejaculate. This is a form of sterilization and birth control for males.
A vasectomy blocks the path of sperm. It does not change the production of testosterone or other hormones.
To be technically correct, it's called an "Ectopic" pregnancy, which occurs when a fertilized egg begins to grow in one of the fallopian tubes that normally transport an unfertilized egg from the ovary to the uterus rather than descending into the uterus and attaching to the Uterus wall/lining. As for your question, a man who has had a vasectomy is by definition sterile and cannot impregnate a woman (assuming that the vasectomy was successful, of course). Vasectomy involves cutting and cauterizing or clamping the tubes that transport sperm from the testicles, so after this procedure has been performed, no sperm will be present in the ejaculate that comes from the man during orgasm. Normally, only a few small drops of the ejaculate come from the testicles anyway, the rest is from the prostate so there is no noticeable difference in ejaculate from vasectomized men. For several weeks following a vasectomy, birth control measures should still be used to prevent and remaining sperm from potentially causing pregnancy, but that sperm wouldn't cause an ectopic pregnancy any more than other sperm.