1. The table shows the results of spinning a four-colored spinner 50 times. Find the experimental probability and express it as a decimal.

P(not red) = ?

(1 point)
a 0.6
b 0.4
c 0.2
d 0.3

2. You roll a number cube 20 times. The number 4 is rolled 8 times. What is the experimental probability of rolling a 4? (1 point)

a 40%
b 25%
c 20%
d 17%

3. The table below shows the results of flipping two coins. How does the experimental probability of getting at least one tails compare to the
theoretical probability of getting at least one?

A The experimental probability is 3% greater than the theoretical probability.

B The theoretical probability is 3% greater than the experimental probability.

C The experimental probability is equal to the theoretical probability.

D The experimental probability is about 1% less than the theoretical probability.

4. The probability of winning a game is 15%. If you play 20 times, how many times should you expect to win? (1 point)
a 5 times
b 3 times
c 6 times
d 15 times

5. The probability of having a winning raffle ticket is 20%. If you bought 50 tickets, how many winning tickets should you expect to have?

a 5 tickets
b 3 tickets
c 8 tickets
d 10 tickets

6. A company finds 5 defective toys in a sample of 600. Predict how many defective toys are in a shipment of 24,000.

a 40 toys
b 166 toys
c 200 toys
d 20 toys

7. Which of the following is an example of independent events?

A rolling two number cubes

B selecting marbles from a bag without
replacement after each draw

C choosing and eating a piece of candy from a dish and then choosing another piece of candy

D Pulling a card from a deck when other players have already pulled several cards from that deck

8. A bag of fruit contains 4 apples, 1 plum, 2 apricots, and 3 oranges. Pieces of fruit are drawn twice with replacement. What is P(apple, then
apricot)? (1 point)

a 4/5
b 2/25
c 3/25
d 3/5

9. A coin is flipped three times. How the does P(H, H, H) compare to P(H, T, H)? (1 point)

A. P(H, H, H) is greater than P(H, T, H)
B.P(H, T, H) is greater than P(H, H, H).
c.The probabilities are the same.
d.There is no way to tell with the information given.

10. A coin is tossed and a number cube is rolled. What is P(heads, a number less than 5)? (1 point)

A 1/3
B 5/12
C 2/3
D 5/6

Anonymous is incorrect

with his/her answers i got a 80

the correct answers are
1.A
2.A
3.B
4.B
5.C
6.C
7.A
8.B
9.C
10.A

Thanks you so much 100% is correct, they've got the right answers

THANK YOUUU SO MUUUCH!!!

100% correct is right

THANK U

What do you think for each of the problems?

bot help me please

The table below shows the results of flipping two coins. How does the experimental probability of getting at least one tails compare to the
theoretical probability of getting at least one?

A The experimental probability is 3% greater than the theoretical probability.

B The theoretical probability is 3% greater than the experimental probability.

C The experimental probability is equal to the theoretical probability.

D The experimental probability is about 1% less than the theoretical probability.

4. The probability of winning a game is 15%. If you play 20 times, how many times should you expect to win? (1 point)
a 5 times
b 3 times
c 6 times
d 15 times

5. The probability of having a winning raffle ticket is 20%. If you bought 50 tickets, how many winning tickets should you expect to have?

a 5 tickets
b 3 tickets
c 8 tickets
d 10 tickets

6. A company finds 5 defective toys in a sample of 600. Predict how many defective toys are in a shipment of 24,000.

a 40 toys
b 166 toys
c 200 toys
d 20 toys

7. Which of the following is an example of independent events?

A rolling two number cubes

B selecting marbles from a bag without
replacement after each draw

C choosing and eating a piece of candy from a dish and then choosing another piece of candy

D Pulling a card from a deck when other players have already pulled several cards from that deck

8. A bag of fruit contains 4 apples, 1 plum, 2 apricots, and 3 oranges. Pieces of fruit are drawn twice with replacement. What is P(apple, then
apricot)? (1 point)

a 4/5
b 2/25
c 3/25
d 3/5

9. A coin is flipped three times. How the does P(H, H, H) compare to P(H, T, H)? (1 point)

A. P(H, H, H) is greater than P(H, T, H)
B.P(H, T, H) is greater than P(H, H, H).
c.The probabilities are the same.
d.There is no way to tell with the information given.

10. A coin is tossed and a number cube is rolled. What is P(heads, a number less than 5)? (1 point)

A 1/3
B 5/12
C 2/3
D 5/6

3. C (theoretical probability of getting at least one tails is equal to the experimental probability)

4. C (expected number of outcomes = probability * number of trials, so 20 * 15% = 3)
5. A (expected number of winning tickets = probability * number of tickets, so 20% * 50 = 10, expect to have around 5 winning tickets)
6. B (multiply the proportion by the total number of toys, so 5/600 = x/24000, x = 200)
7. A (rolling two number cubes are independent events)
8. C (probability of drawing an apple then an apricot with replacement is (4/10) * (2/10) = 3/25)
9. B (P(H, T, H) has more possible outcomes compared to P(H, H, H), hence the probability of it occurring is higher)
10. A (Probability of getting heads is 1/2, and probability of getting a number less than 5 is 4/6, so the probability of both occurring is 1/2 * 4/6 = 1/3)

1)c

2)d
3)B
outcome|HH | TH | HT | TT
--------------------------
landed |28 |22 |34 | 16

4)c
5)a
6)a
7)a
8)a
9)B
10)D
am i correct?

1) table not shown, so cannot verify.

2) what is the probability of rolling 8 times out of 20?
3) correct.
4) expected number of outcomes
= probability * number of trials
So 20*15%=20*0.15=3
5) See number (4) and try again.
6) What is the experimental probability of pulling 5 defective from 600?
7) correct
8) Please explain how you chose a).
9) correct.
10) Please explain how you got d).