Hey, Miss Cellania! You're probably just as clueless as I am, but I wanna have a go at this... Do you think the answer could be 0%? Because maybe d) is the same answer as a), so we can leave that one out altogether. So there are only three answers. We'd need one of them to be 33.3% to be correct, right? But that's not there, we'd have zero chance of picking it at random. But maybe it's illegal to cancel out d). I'm really not really a maths geek, so who knows!?
If I choose an answer at random, then it's unlikely to be any of the probabilities given. I don't think the question limits you to a, b,c, or d. After all, none of them would truly be random.
The chances of my truly random answer being correct are......random. Unquantifiable.
3 comments:
Hey, Miss Cellania! You're probably just as clueless as I am, but I wanna have a go at this... Do you think the answer could be 0%? Because maybe d) is the same answer as a), so we can leave that one out altogether. So there are only three answers. We'd need one of them to be 33.3% to be correct, right? But that's not there, we'd have zero chance of picking it at random. But maybe it's illegal to cancel out d). I'm really not really a maths geek, so who knows!?
Cheerio!
I had no problem. The answer is B.
If I choose an answer at random, then it's unlikely to be any of the probabilities given. I don't think the question limits you to a, b,c, or d.
After all, none of them would truly be random.
The chances of my truly random answer being correct are......random. Unquantifiable.
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