Math, asked by agarwalayush08007, 6 months ago

) The king queen and Jack of club' are removed
a deck of 52 cards and then suffled. 3
Que cand
is selected, find the probability of:
i) a
a club.
1)king
2Jack of black
3 a club​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
12

Answer:

The King, Queen and Jack of clubs are removed from a pack of 52 cards and then the remaining cards are well shuffled. A card is selected from the remaining ...

Answered by TheMoonlìghtPhoenix
39

Step-by-step explanation:

Correct Question:-

The king and the Jack of a club are removed from a deck of 52 cards. If one of the card is selected find the probability of:-

  • A Queen
  • A club
  • A king
  • A jack of black
  • A club.

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Conditions:-

If 2 cards removed, then total cards are 50 now.

  • A queen.

There are 4 queens. So, the probability will be \sf{\dfrac{4}{50}}

Reduced to \sf{\dfrac{2}{25}}

  • A club.

There were 13, 2 were removed. So, we have total 11. So, the answer is \sf{\dfrac{11}{50}}

  • A king.

One king was removed, left are 4 kings.

So, the probability of a king is \sf{\dfrac{3}{50}}

  • Jack of black

Jack of black were 2, one of spade also. One is removed. So the probability is \sf{\dfrac{1}{50}}

  • A club.

There are 13 clubs, so probability is \sf{\dfrac{11}{50}} as 2 are removed, as stated above.

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