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1 February, 07:00

If two cards are drawn without replacement from a deck, find the probability that the second card is a spade, given that the first card was a spade.

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Answers (2)
  1. 1 February, 07:11
    0
    We have 13 spades in a standard pack of cards.

    Let's take cases.

    Case 1: First card - - spade

    Our sampling space is 52 cards, it isn't changed because we still haven't drawn anything.

    Taken that it's a spade, our sampling space is reduced because it is dependent of our first event.

    Case 2: Second card - - spade

    Given that we don't replace the card, the second card is dependent of the first card. If we pick up a spade on the first draw, we have 51 cards to choose 12 spades.

    (ie 4/17)
  2. 1 February, 07:15
    0
    There are 13 spades in a standard deck of cards, so if the first one is a spade, there are 12 spades left.

    So the chances of getting another one would be 12/52 because there are 52 cards in a standard deck of cards.

    Reduced, your answer is 3/13
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