You reject the Null Hypothesis when you have a small P-Value. Here is an example! Also we never accept the null hypothesis, think of it like this if we bring someone to court you wouldn't say their innocent of a crime, you only know that if they do not get convicted of the crime they are not guilty in the eyes of the law. Same thing applies here, since there could be several answers that satisfy our assumptions made, we can not be certain that 1 of those assumptions is the REAL answer it's just AN answer.
The probability of multiple events happening is found by multiplying the probabilities of each event together.

So yes, 1/10 is the answer :)
0=6n- 36
6n-36
6 x-5-36
35-36
n=-1
I hope this help
Three cards are selected from a standard deck of <span>52 </span><span>cards. Disregarding the order in which they are drawn, the possible outcomes are </span><span><span>(<span>52/3</span>)</span></span><span>. Out of these, how many include all cards of the same color (say red)? There are </span><span><span>(<span>13/3</span>)</span></span><span> ways in which you can get all 13 red cards.</span>