There are 4 aces and 16 tens (including face cards) in a standard 52-card deck of cards, so there are 64 different blackjack combinations. There are 52!/(50!2!) = 1326 different two-card combinations in the deck, so the odds are 64/1326 = 0.048, or slightly less than 5%.
If there is 1 Jack of clubs, and 52 total cards, then the chance of picking the jack on the first selection is 1/52
In a full deck of 52 cards your chances are one in thirteen. The same goes for every other card as well not just jacks.
1 in 26
Well there are six possibilities, the four jacks and the two black threes. This gives us a fraction of 6/52 which is a percentage of 11.54%
It is 50/52 or 0.9615
1/52. Only one card, the Jack of diamonds, will satisfy your requirements.
There are two black jacks in each deck of cards. There is a jack of spades and a jack of clubs. Each deck of cards has two suits that are black, spades and clubs. Each deck also has three face cards (cards that depict a person), jack, queen and king, for each suit. Therefore, there are two black jacks (jack of a black suit) in each deck of 52 cards.
There are 2 red jacks, so 2/52 or about .038%
Assuming a 52 card deck with no cards already drawn, the chance that you draw a queen OR a jack is 8/52.
3/13=0.23 or 23% or 12/52=0.23 or 23%
The answer depends on whether or not the first card is replaced before drawing the second.
yes, its called a BLACK jack so they both need to be black.