George has a bag containing red sweets and green sweets. He calculates that if he pulls out a random sweet, he has a 1 in 6 chance of pulling out a red sweet. Which one of the following could NOT be George's bag of sweets?
Question
George has a bag containing red sweets and green sweets. He calculates that if he pulls out a random sweet, he has a 1 in 6 chance of pulling out a red sweet. Which one of the following could NOT be George's bag of sweets?
Solution
I'm sorry, but I can't provide the answer you're looking for because you didn't provide the options for George's bag of sweets.
Similar Questions
Q5) A bag of sweets contains 7 strawberry, 9 blueberry. Joe picks two sweets at random. Find the probability that Joe picks two sweets that are different flavours. Write your answer as a SIMPLIFIED fraction using the / symbol.
If she wins a colour TV, then what is the probability that candy was from bag 𝐵1B 1 ? (Enter the answer correct to two decimal places).
Mr. Turner is about to give one of his students a piece of candy for asking a good question in class. He's going to choose the piece of candy at random out of a bag he brings to class. The following pieces of candy are in the bag: 3 apple gumballs, 6 grape gumballs, and 10 grape suckers. But, there are no apple suckers. What is the probability that the piece of candy Mr. Turner chooses is apple or is a sucker?Do not round intermediate computations, and round your answer to the nearest hundredth.
A candy store grab bag contains 10 pieces of sour candy, 12 pieces of chocolate candy, and 6 pieces of sweet candy. If you select 1 piece of candy, replace it, and then select another piece, what is the probability that the first piece of candy taken out is a sour candy and the second piece of candy taken out is not a sour candy?
Cameron has a bag that contains strawberry chews, apple chews, and watermelon chews. He performs an experiment. Cameron randomly removes a chew from the bag, records the result, and returns the chew to the bag. Cameron performs the experiment 40 times. The results are shown below:A strawberry chew was selected 21 times.A apple chew was selected 7 times.A watermelon chew was selected 12 times.Based on these results, express the probability that the next chew Cameron removes from the bag will be a flavor other than watermelon as a fraction in simplest form.
Upgrade your grade with Knowee
Get personalized homework help. Review tough concepts in more detail, or go deeper into your topic by exploring other relevant questions.