Form the bag we have to choose only one candy. That can be either blue or green, but not both blue and green so

Yes, these outcomes are mutually exclusive because choosing a blue and green M&M is not possible.
Similarly, the one candy we choose can be either yellow or red. Then,

Yes, these outcomes are mutually exclusive because choosing a red and yellow M&M is not possible.
By the compliment law

M&M plain candies come in various colors. According to the M&M/Mars Department of Consumer Affairs, the...
8. [-18 Points] DETAILS BBBASICSTAT6 5.2.013. M M&M plain candies come in various colors. According to the M&M/Mars Department of Consumer Affairs, the distribution of colors for plain M&M candies is as follows. Color Purple Yellow Red Orange Green Blue Brown Percentage 17% 23% 22% 10% 7% 7% 14% Suppose you have a large bag of plain M&M candies and you choose one candy at random. (a) Find P(green candy or blue candy). Are these outcomes mutually exclusive? Why? O...
17.-/1 pointsBBUnderStat1242.034 At Litchfield College of Nursing, 87% of incoming freshmen nursing students are female and 13 % are male. Recent records indicate that 70% of the entering female students will graduate with a BSN degree, while 80 % of the male students will obtain a BSN degree. If an incoming freshman nursing student is selected at random, find the following probabilities, (Enter your answers to three decimal places.) (a) P(student will graduate I student is female) (b) P(student will...
Plain M&M’s candies come in six colors: yellow, red, orange, brown, blue, and green. The makers of M&M’s say that 20% of the produced candies are yellow, 20% are red, 20% are orange, 15% are brown, 15% are blue, and the rest of the produced candies are green. Given what you know about probability and probability models, which one of the following statements is correct? A More than 10% of the produced candies must be green. B If we randomly...
Plain M&M's candies come in six colors: yellow, red, orange, brown, blue, and green. The makers of M&M's say that 20% of the produced candies are yellow, 20% are red, 20% are orange, 15% are brown, 15% are blue, and the rest of the produced candies are green. Given what you know about probability and probability models, which one of the following statements is correct? The proportion of produced candies that are brown is 0.015. If we randomly select one...
39. M&M's The Mars company says that before the intro- duction of purple, yellow candies made up 20% of their plain M&M's, red another 20%, and orange, blue, and green each made up 10%. The rest were brown. a) If you pick an M&M at random, what is the probabil- ity that 1. it is brown? 2. it is yellow or orange? 3. it is not green? 4. it is striped? b) If you pick three M&M's in a row,...
Please explain why and give
detail.
M&M Candies reports that the plain M&Ms are manufactured with 30% brown, 20% red, 20% yellow, 10% orange, 10% blue, and 10% green candies. Below are 3 graphs. One represents the colors of individual M&Ms for the population of all M&M Candies, one represents the colors in a sample of 20 M&M Candies, and one represents the sampling distribution of the proportion of brown candies in 500 samples of size 50. You should not...
M&M's Color Distribution: Suppose the makers of M&M candies give the following average percentages for the mix of colors in their bags of plain chocolate M&M's. Stated Distribution of Colors Brown Yellow Red Orange Green Blue Percent 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 10% Now, you randomly select 200 M&M's and get the counts given in the table below. You expected about 20 blues but only got 11. You suspect that the maker's claim is not true. Observed Counts by Color...
If you draw an M&M candy at random from a bag of the
candies, the piece you draw will be one of six colors: brown, red,
yellow, green, orange, tan. The probability of drawing each color
depends on the proportion of each color among all candies made.
Assume the table below gives the probabilities for the color of a
randomly chosen M&M.
The probability of drawing either a red or a tan candy is
_____.
Note: Give you answer in...
Amanufacturer of colored candies states that 13% of the candies in a bag should be brown, 14% yellow, 13% red. 24% blue, 20% orange, and 16% green. A student randomly selected a bag of colored candies. He counted the number of candies of each color and obtained the results shown in the table. Test whether the bag of colored candies follows the distribution stated above at the 0.05 level of significance Click the loon to view the table Determine the...
A box is filled with candies in different colors. We have 40 white candies, 24 green ones, 12 red ones, 24 yellow ones and 20 blue ones. If we have selected one candy from the box without peeking into it, find the probability of getting a green or red cand. Please show your work/explanation?