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You have three $1 bills, four $5 bills, and two $10 bills in your wallet. You select a bill at random. Without replacing the bill, you choose a second bill at random. What is P($10 then $1)?
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Apr 8, 2019
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You have three $1 bills, four $5 bills, and two $10 bills in your wallet. You select a bill at random. Without replacing the bill, you choose a second bill at random. What is P($10 then $1)?
Mathematics
high-school
Fong Kah Chun
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Fong Kah Chun
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Greetings!
To find the first probability, you first find the amount of $10 bills and the total amount. Then you can put this into a fraction:
Now, do the same but for the total amount, be sure to remove 1 because you have not returned the first one picked. Now find the amount of $1 bills too:
Now you have two fractions of two consecutive events, now just simply multiply the two together:
x
=
Now as both numbers are factors of 6, both can be divided by 6 to get a simplified probability:
÷ 6 =
So P($10 then $1) =
Hope this helps!
Bhanu Pratap
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Apr 14, 2019
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Bhanu Pratap
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