
Concept explainers
Find whether the statement, “Drawing two socks out of a drawer without replacing them are examples of mutually exclusive events.”

Answer to Problem 10SGR
The statement is false and the correct statement will be, “Drawing two socks out of a drawer without replacing them are examples of dependent events.”
Explanation of Solution
Given information: The given statement is, “Drawing two socks out of a drawer without replacing them are examples of mutually exclusive events.”
Calculation: The given statement is false because drawing two objects from a drawer without replacement is the case of dependent events. Hence the statement is false and the correct statement is, “Drawing two socks out of a drawer without replacing them are examples of dependent events.”
Chapter 13 Solutions
Geometry, Student Edition
Additional Math Textbook Solutions
Basic Business Statistics, Student Value Edition
University Calculus: Early Transcendentals (4th Edition)
Algebra and Trigonometry (6th Edition)
Calculus: Early Transcendentals (2nd Edition)
Introductory Statistics
Thinking Mathematically (6th Edition)
- Door 87.5in to 47 living 44.75 Closet 96in Window ISS.Sin 48in Train Table 96in 48in 132:2 Windowarrow_forward39 Two sides of one triangle are congruent to two sides of a second triangle, and the included angles are supplementary. The area of one triangle is 41. Can the area of the second triangle be found?arrow_forwardA parallelogram with an area of 211.41 m^2 hast a base Thatcher measures 24.3m. Find ist height.arrow_forward
- Elementary Geometry For College Students, 7eGeometryISBN:9781337614085Author:Alexander, Daniel C.; Koeberlein, Geralyn M.Publisher:Cengage,Elementary Geometry for College StudentsGeometryISBN:9781285195698Author:Daniel C. Alexander, Geralyn M. KoeberleinPublisher:Cengage Learning

