Ask Question
15 April, 11:17

Peter buys a bag of 21 sweets. In the bag there 13 red sweets, 6 green sweets and 2 yellow sweets Peter likes red sweets and eats 3 of them He then asks his sister to choose one sweet at random from the bag. There are 2 questions to answer. What is the probability that she chooses a red sweet? what is the probability that she chooses an orange sweet?

+2
Answers (2)
  1. 15 April, 14:00
    0
    Probability=number of specific outcomes/total number of outcomes ...

    Since Peter eats 3 reds there are only 10 reds and 18 total sweets left, therefore the probability of his sister picking a red randomly is:

    10/18=5/9

    There are no orange sweets so the probability of picking one is zero.
  2. 15 April, 14:32
    0
    You have to write this as a fraction look at the total number of sweets and turn it in to a fraction there are 21 sweets so that's the denominator there are 13 red sweets so that's the numerator but he took away three so 10/21 is the probability of picking a red sweet
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “Peter buys a bag of 21 sweets. In the bag there 13 red sweets, 6 green sweets and 2 yellow sweets Peter likes red sweets and eats 3 of them ...” in 📘 Mathematics if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers