There are 36 possible outcomes (6x6). There are 5 possible rolls that will give you an 8 (6+1, 5+2, 4+4. 2+5, 1+6). 5 out of 36 or 1 in 7.2
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
With two normal six-sided dice, the maximum sum can only be 12 (6 x 2 dice), so there is zero probability of rolling a sum that adds to 16.
Assuming these are regular dice, the probability is 1.
one in sixsame for any number
You can't get 14 with two regular six-sided dice ! The highest you can get with one throw is 12.
If they are normal dice, the probability is 0.
Assuming a 6 sided die, a roll of 2 gives a maximum value of 12. So the probability of getting a 16 is zero.
If two six sided fair dice are rolled, the sum of the result of both dice that has the lowest probability to come up is 2 and 12. P(2) = 1/36. P(12) = 1/36.
With two normal six-sided dice, the maximum sum can only be 12 (6 x 2 dice), so there is zero probability of rolling a sum that adds to 16.
It is 1/6.
one in sixsame for any number
Assuming these are regular dice, the probability is 1.
The probability of rolling 12 with 2 dice is 1 in 36. The probability of not rolling 12 with 2 dice is 35 in 36.
It is 0.5
It depends on the numbers on the 4 sided die. I don't believe that is a recognised standard.
5/36