There are 4 free choices for the first variety, and since he wanted to choose two variety, the second one is limited to three choices. How many possible choices (P(2)) are possible?
Now he could have chosen A/S or S/A, so the probability is 2/P(2).
A student wants to send a bouquet of roses to her mother for Mother's Day. She can afford to buy only two types of roses and decides to randomly pick two from the following four varieties: Blue Bell, Yellow Success, Sahara, and Aphrodite. Label the varieties B, Y, S, A. Assuming that all outcomes are equally likely, what is the probability that she will pick Sahara and Aphrodite?
1 answer