The answer is true. A conditional probability is a measure
of the probability of an event given that (by assumption, presumption,
assertion or evidence) another event has occurred. If the event of interest is
A and the event B is known or assumed to have occurred, "the conditional
probability of A given B", or "the probability of A in the condition
B", is usually written as P (A|B). The conditional probability of A given
B is well-defined as the quotient of the probability of the joint of events A
and B, and the probability of B.
Answer: 38 shares
Step-by-step explanation:
1 out if 20 you would get right
There is 5 questions 4 answers to pick from so 5 times 4 is 20
Then they said what is the probability of only getting one answer right
So the answer would be 1 out of 20 1/20
Answer:
see below
Step-by-step explanation:
2/3y + 15 = 9
Subtract 15 from each side
2/3y + 15-15 = 9-15
2/3y = -6
Multiply each side by 3/2 to isolate y
3/2 * 2/3y = -6 *3/2
y = -9