Math, asked by Anikakapoor89601, 7 months ago

3. What is the probability of drawing a "king" and then drawing a "queen" from a deck of cards, without putting the king?

Answers

Answered by Prinishaa55
0

Answer:

4/54....(because there are 4 kings in a deck of cards)

Hope this helps you

Answered by IIMidnightHunterII
4

Answer:

as \: we \: know \: that \: their \: are \: 52 \: cards \: in \: deck \\ and \: their \: are \: 4 \: kings \: in \: the \: deck \\ so \: the \: probability \: of \: drawing \: a \: king \: is \:  =  \frac{4}{52}  =  \frac{1}{13}  \\  \\ and \: after \: removing \: the \: kings \: cards \: their \: are \: 42 \: cards \: in \: the \: deck \\  and \: their \: are \: 4 \: queen \: cards \: in \: the \: deck \:  \\  \\ so \: the \: probability \: of \: drawing \: queen \: is \:  =  \frac{4}{48}  =  \frac{1}{12}  \\  \\ hope \: it \: helps

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