This exercise refers to a standard deck of playing cards. Assume
that 5 cards are randomly chosen from the deck.
How many hands contain exactly two 2s and two 8s?

This exercise refers to a standard deck of playing cards. Assume that 5 cards are randomly chosen from the deck. How ma...
5 cards are drawn from a standard deck of 52 playing cards. How many different 5-card hands are possible if the drawing is done without replacement?
please provide explanations.
Exercise 1.9: There are 52 cards in a standard deck of playing cards. The poker hand consists of five cards. How many poker hands are there?
In a standard deck of 52 playing cards there are 4 jacks, 4 queens, and 4 kings, called face cards. Assume that being dealt a hand in cards is like selecting those cards at random from the deck. An ace can count as a low card (as 1) and also as the high card (as in K, A). Four-card hands a. How many different 4−card hands are possible from a deck of 52 cards
4 cards are randomly drawn from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the prob- ability that all their suits are different? Hint: There are 52 cards in a standard deck of playing cards. A card can have 4 different suits: diamond ( ♦ ), club ( ♣ ), heart ( ♥ ), or spades ( ♠ ). There are 13 cards of each suit. Cards are further labeled by their rank: numbers 1 to 10 and three face...
If seven cards are chosen from a well-shuffled deck of 52 playing cards. In how many selections do 2 diamonds occur? a. 2,613,754 b. 5,987,210 c. 44,909,046 d. 67,406,072 e. 28,512,713 Please also show how you set it up. Thanks.
What is the probability that 5 randomly chosen cards from a standard deck (containing 26 red and 26 black) will be all red?
10 cards are chosen from a standard deck. how many ways can this be done in such a way that a) there is at least one card from each suit? b) at least one suit is not chosen? c) exactly one suit is not chosen?
Consider a standard deck of 52 playing cards, a randomly selected card from the deck, and the following events: R = red, B = black, A = ace, N = nine, D = diamond, and C = club. Are A and N mutually exclusive? Yes, mutually exclusive. No, not mutually exclusive.
5 cards are drawn at random from a standard deck of playing cards. What is the probability that all are the same suit?
Suppose we randomly select 5 cards without replacement from an ordinary deck of playing cards. What is the probability of getting exactly 2 red cards (fi.e, hearts or diamonds)? Select one: O C O a. 0.22640 b, 0.32513 e. 0.29235 d.0.44259 e.0.19277