The probability of drawing a king and a queen from a standard 52 card deck is 32 in 2652, or 8 in 663, or about 0.012066. The first king or queen is 8 in 52. The second card is 4 in 51. Simply multiply 8/52 by 4/51.
King. From top down: Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3 and 2. In some card games (rare) the Ace is 1 and the lowest card.
P(Card is King) = 4/52 P(Card is Queen) = 4/52 Since these are mutually exclusive events.i.e. they can't happen in a single trial these two probabilities will be added. P(King or Queen) = 4/52 + 4/52 = 8/52
It depends on the game. Which cards 'beat' others will be defined by the rules of the card game, whichever it is. Many games do not use the joker at all. Others, such as Canasta, treat it as a wild card. In Euchre, it is the highest ranked card.
No a queen is higher then a jackIt depends on the game; however, in sequence, a Queen is greater than a Jack.The Jack acts as the number 11.The Queen acts as the number 12.
Princess.
princess
4/52+4/52= 8/52 = 2/13 = 0.153846... ≈ 15.4%
Princess!
VidBlogger Nation - 2011 Atlanta King and Queen of Clubland 1-8 was released on: USA: 12 September 2011
The Weakness - 2007 The King and Queen Don't Dance Anymore 1-8 was released on: USA: 19 April 2009
In the "Hierarchy of Cards" the King is usually the highest (Sometimes the Ace is higher depending on what game you're playing), followed by the Queen, then Jack, then 10, 9, 8, etc.