If you are selecting from any number than virtually 0. If you are rolling a die then there are 6 possible outcomes, and 2 numbers that are odd and less than 5 so 2/6=1/3.
The probability that the die tossed will land on a number that is smaller than 5 is 4/6 or 2/3. Smaller than 5 is 1 - 4 and 6 is the sample space.
A probability can be no larger than 1 and no smaller than 0.
The probability of getting tails on a coin is SMALLER than rolling a number greater than 2
There are 6 values, 1 - 6, on the die. Less than 3 is a 1 or 2 roll. So, probability of less than 3 is 2/6 or 1/3 or 33.33%.
9 is a square number less than 16. The number 9, in itself, has no probability since there is no "experiment" defined.9 is a square number less than 16. The number 9, in itself, has no probability since there is no "experiment" defined.9 is a square number less than 16. The number 9, in itself, has no probability since there is no "experiment" defined.9 is a square number less than 16. The number 9, in itself, has no probability since there is no "experiment" defined.
The probability that the die tossed will land on a number that is smaller than 5 is 4/6 or 2/3. Smaller than 5 is 1 - 4 and 6 is the sample space.
A probability can be no larger than 1 and no smaller than 0.
The probability of getting tails on a coin is SMALLER than rolling a number greater than 2
A single fair die has the numbers 1 to 6, so when a single fair die is tossed the probability of obtaining a number different than 11 is: P(x diff than11) = 1.
It is 0.6915
100%, since you cannot roll a 9 with a six sided die.
There are 6 values, 1 - 6, on the die. Less than 3 is a 1 or 2 roll. So, probability of less than 3 is 2/6 or 1/3 or 33.33%.
all probabilities smaller than the given probability ("at most") all probabilities larger than the given probability ("at least")
It is 1/12.
assuming we are talking about standard dice here (six sided, numbered 1-6) then the probability of obtaining a result other than 12 when a single die is tossed is 100%. There is no way to roll a 12 after 1 toss of 1 die, therefore the chance of getting anything other than 12 is guaranteed
The probability of rolling a number greater than 6 on a die is 0.
The best way to do this is to note that this is 1 minus the probability of obtaining a sum less than 6. The probability of obtaining a 2 is 1/36 (both dice get 1) The probability of obtaining a 3 is 1/18 (one dice gets 1, the other gets 2, or the other way around) The probability of obtaining a 4 is 1/12 (both dice get 2, or one dice gets 1 and the other 3, or the other way around) The probability of obtaining a 5 is 1/9 (one dice gets 2 and the other 3, or the other way around, or one dice gets 1 and the other 4, or the other way around) Adding these probabilities up gives 5/18. 1 minus this is 13/18 Thus the probability of obtaining a sum of at least 6 when rolling a pair of dice is 13/18.