A. I, would think, that the question of interest is we're trying to find the probability that all of a person's tiles, after drawing seven, are vowels.
b. This is assumed to be choosing tiles without replacement (at least, that's what I'm assuming based on the introduction). What I'd do is use the numbers 00 – 99 (100 numbers total). 00 – 41 will be the numbers that mean I obtained a vowel! All others, not a vowel. Now I'll use numbers 00 – 98; if I obtained a vowel on the first one, then I'll use numbers 00 – 40; otherwise, 00 – 41 is still 'I obtained a vowel'. Now I draw a second time. Now for the third draw, the numbers will be 00 – 97. If I obtained another vowel on my second draw, 00 – 39 will be 'I obtained a vowel'; if I obtained my VERY first vowel on the second draw, 00 – 40 will be 'I obtained my vowel' for the third draw. Repeat this process seven times with the given stipulations.
c. Yow, that was a mouthful. So, using my stipulations, my numbers are:
00 (vowel); 69 (not); 40 (vowel); 59 (not); 77 (not); 19 (vowel); 66 (not)
I got three vowels in that one repetition.
d. So my statistic is p-hat, or the sample proportion = 0.002. I could conclude that THAT is the probability that someone gets all vowels after drawing seven tiles [in statistical terms, that's me using p-hat as an unbiased estimator of the parameter p].
e. I would expect to play, on average, 10000 games for that to happen. (That's the first number that came to mind; I really don't know if there's a right way to guess.)
Answer:
She will enjoy swimming in our pond, riding horses and picking berries for pies. My brother is afraid, she will get bored on our farm but, I think she will love it here. With all of the things mom and I have planned, she won't have time to be bored.
In Steinbacks’ “The Chrysanthemum”, Elisa Allen’s
interaction with the repairman indicates her need of a different life that she
had been experiencing. She was born at a time where women had little opportunity
to choose the things they want and express their wants. It can be seen that
Elisa is an intelligent and passionate woman who’s been married to a man that
she do not like. Her interaction with the repairman is mostly exchanged with thought-provoking
conversation and the need for sex. Because these are the things that were not
given to her by her husband. The repairman, even though he exchanges flirts
with her, do not feel the same. It is shown that he does not share Elisa’s
passion at all when he threw Elisa’s chrysanthemum shoots away – a representation
of Elisa.