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18 June, 10:37

Consider a standard deck of 52 playing cards with 4 suits.

What is the probability of randomly drawing 1 card that is both a red card and a face card?

(Remember that face cards are jacks, queens, and kings.)

Enter your answer as a fraction in simplest form, using the / symbol, like this: 5/14

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Answers (2)
  1. 18 June, 10:56
    0
    3/26

    Step-by-step explanation:

    The face cards are: Jack, Queen, and King. There are only three face cards for each of the 4 suits.

    Among the 4 suits, two of them are red: diamonds and hearts. And, each of these two has 3 faces. That means that in a deck of 52 cards, there are 2 * 3 = 6 cards that are both red cards and face cards.

    Probability is (# times specific event can occur) / (# times any general event will occur).

    Here, the specific event is drawing a card that is both red and a face card (of which there are 6 ways), and the general event is drawing a card (of which there are 52 ways):

    P (draw a card that is both red and a face card) = 6/52 = 3/26
  2. 18 June, 11:03
    0
    3/26

    Step-by-step explanation:

    In a deck of 52 cards, there are two red suits: Diamonds and Hearts

    There are 6 red face cards:

    2 red King

    2 red Queen

    2 red Jack

    P (red face card) = 6/52 = 3/26
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