Chapter 27: Probability (Set-3)

When two coins are tossed, which event is a compound event

A Getting HH
B Getting TT
C Getting HT only
D Getting one head

For any two events A and B, which set identity is always true

A (A∪B)′=A′∪B′
B (A∩B)′=A∩B
C (A∩B)′=A′∪B′
D (A∪B)′=A∪B

For events A and B, which identity is always true

A (A∪B)′=A′∪B′
B (A∪B)′=A′∩B′
C (A∩B)′=A′∩B′
D (A′)′=A′

If A and B are mutually exclusive, then which is correct

A P(A∪B)=P(A)P(B)
B P(A∩B)=P(A)+P(B)
C P(A′)=P(B′)
D P(A|B)=0

If P(A)=0.25 and P(A∪B)=0.60 and P(A∩B)=0.10, then P(B) is

A 0.45
B 0.35
C 0.25
D 0.75

If P(A)=0.3, P(B)=0.5 and P(A∩B)=0.15, then A and B are

A Disjoint
B Independent
C Exhaustive
D Complements

A die is rolled. Events A: “even”, B: “multiple of 3”. P(A∩B) is

A 1/3
B 1/2
C 2/3
D 1/6

A die is rolled. Events A: “even”, B: “multiple of 3”. P(A∪B) is

A 1/2
B 1/3
C 2/3
D 5/6

Two coins are tossed. Events A: “first is head”, B: “second is head”. P(A∩B) is

A 1/2
B 1/4
C 3/4
D 1/8

Two coins are tossed. P(first head | second head) is

A 1/4
B 3/4
C 1
D 1/2

Two dice are thrown. Probability of getting sum 9 is

A 1/9
B 1/12
C 1/6
D 5/36

Two dice are thrown. Probability that sum is at least 10 is

A 1/12
B 1/9
C 1/6
D 1/4

Two cards drawn without replacement from a deck. P(second ace | first ace) is

A 4/52
B 3/51
C 1/13
D 4/51

In a deck, event A: “red”, B: “king”. P(A|B) is

A 1/4
B 3/4
C 1/13
D 1/2

If P(A)=0.6, P(B|A)=0.5, then P(A∩B) is

A 0.30
B 0.10
C 0.50
D 0.60

If P(B)=0.4, P(A|B)=0.25, then P(A∩B) is

A 0.65
B 0.10
C 0.16
D 0.20

A bag has 5 red and 3 blue. Two draws without replacement. P(one red, one blue) is

A 5/14
B 3/8
C 15/28
D 1/2

Two draws with replacement from same bag (5 red,3 blue). P(one red, one blue) is

A 15/28
B 15/32
C 5/8
D 3/8

If A and B are independent, then P(A′∩B) equals

A P(A′)+P(B)
B 1−P(A∩B)
C P(A)P(B)
D P(A′)P(B)

If A and B are independent, then A′ and B′ are

A Mutually exclusive
B Exhaustive only
C Independent
D Equal events

If P(A)=0.2 and P(B)=0.3 independent, then P(neither) is

A 0.14
B 0.56
C 0.70
D 0.50

If P(A)=0.2 and P(B)=0.3 independent, then P(at least one) is

A 0.56
B 0.06
C 0.50
D 0.44

A partition {B1,B2,B3} satisfies which condition

A Overlap allowed
B Equal probabilities
C Disjoint and exhaustive
D Same outcomes only

If {B1,B2} is a partition, then P(A) equals

A P(A|B1)P(B1)+P(A|B2)P(B2)
B P(A|B1)+P(A|B2)
C P(B1|A)+P(B2|A)
D P(A)P(B1)P(B2)

Bayes theorem mainly converts

A P(A|B) from P(A∩B)
B P(A) from P(A′)
C P(B) from P(B′)
D P(B|A) from P(A|B)

If P(A|B)=0.2, P(B)=0.5, P(A)=0.3, then P(B|A) is

A 1/2
B 1/3
C 2/3
D 1/5

A factory has two machines M1 and M2. If 60% items from M1 and 40% from M2, then these represent

A Likelihood values
B Posterior values
C Prior probabilities
D Conditional sample

If events B1 and B2 form a partition, then B1∩B2 equals

A Empty set
B Sample space
C Event A
D Union set

If events B1 and B2 form a partition, then B1∪B2 equals

A Empty set
B Event A only
C Event B only
D Sample space

If P(A)=0.7 and P(B)=0.6, then maximum P(A∪B) is

A 0.7
B 1
C 0.6
D 0.3

If P(A)=0.7 and P(B)=0.6, then minimum P(A∪B) is

A 0.6
B 0.1
C 1.0
D 0.7

If P(A∩B)=0, then A and B are

A Independent always
B Complements always
C Mutually exclusive
D Exhaustive always

Which expression gives P(A−B)

A P(A)−P(A∩B)
B P(A)+P(B)
C P(A∩B)−P(B)
D 1−P(A)

A and B are independent with P(A)=0.4, P(B)=0.5. Then P(A|B′) is

A 0.5
B 0.4
C 0.6
D 0.2

A fair die is rolled twice. Probability of getting at least one 6 is

A 1/6
B 1/36
C 5/36
D 11/36

A fair coin is tossed three times. Probability of exactly two heads is

A 1/8
B 1/4
C 3/8
D 1/2

If P(A)=0.5, P(B)=0.4, and A and B are mutually exclusive, then P(A|B) equals

A 0.5
B 0
C 0.4
D 1

If P(A|B)=0.7 and P(B)=0.2, then P(A∩B) is

A 0.50
B 0.90
C 0.07
D 0.14

In total probability, weights are the probabilities of

A Target event only
B Partition events
C Complement events
D Impossible events

In Bayes theorem, the “evidence” probability usually means

A P(B)
B P(A|B)
C P(A)
D P(B|A)

A and B are independent with P(A)=0.3. Then P(A′|B) is

A 0.3
B 0.5
C 0.2
D 0.7

If a fair die is rolled, probability that number is not prime is

A 1/2
B 1/3
C 2/3
D 1/6

If P(A)=0.6 and P(B)=0.5, then maximum P(A∩B) is

A 0.3
B 0.5
C 1.1
D 0.1

If P(A)=0.6 and P(B)=0.5, then minimum P(A∩B) is

A 0.0
B 0.3
C 0.1
D 0.5

An event with probability 0.2 is

A Sure event
B Impossible event
C Empty event
D Possible event

If P(A|B)=1, then which must be true

A A ⊆ B
B B ⊆ A
C A and B disjoint
D A′ ⊆ B

If P(A|B)=0, then which must be true

A A∪B is empty
B A equals B
C A∩B is empty
D B is empty

A fair die is rolled. Probability of getting a number less than 3 is

A 1/3
B 1/2
C 2/3
D 1/6

If P(A)=0.4, P(B)=0.3, and A and B are disjoint, then P(A|B) is

A 0.4
B 0
C 0.3
D 0.7

If P(A)=0.2 and P(B)=0.3, then the largest possible P(A∪B) is

A 0.3
B 0.2
C 0.5
D 1.0

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