I'm guessing 50% but there might be a scientific reason for it being different. I advise you to look on the internet or some science websites for kids/teens/adults (I don't really know what you are lol)
hope this helps for whatever you are doing
Gummibear
P.S. This is coming from a 12 year old lol
50% then 25%
50%
1/2
The individual probability that a child born will be female is 50% or 0.5.Using this we can calculate the probability that at least one of the children will be female by:calculating the probability that none of the children will be female and then subtracting this from 1.The probability that all the children are male is therefore 0.53 = 0.5 * 0.5 * 0.5 = 0.125.Thus the answer is 1 - 0.125 = 0.875 = 87.5%
It is always 50/50.
There is no simple answer to the question because the children's genders are not independent events. They depend on the parents' ages and their genes.However, if you assume that children's genders are independent events then, given that the probability of a girl is approx 0.48.
It is approx 0.48
50%
51%..
The probability of selecting 1 female at random is 4/8 There are now 7 students, 3 of which are female so the probability of selecting another female is 3/7 The probability two randomly selected students are female is (4/8)x(3/7)= 3/14
The probability is 2 - 6
No probability. Neither parent has an "A" for the child to inherit to make an "AB".