Probability Trivia
Probability trivia explores the ideas behind chance, randomness, and likelihood, from early gambling problems to the rise of modern statistics. It gives readers a quick, engaging way to test what they know about a science concept that influences everything from weather forecasts to medical research.
Easy Probability Trivia
13 questions
These easy Probability trivia questions are great for beginners and kids around age 12 and under.
Question 1
In probability, what number stands for an impossible event?
- A.0 represents an impossible event.
- B.1
- C.1/2
- D.6
Answer: 0 represents an impossible event.
On the probability scale, 0 means an event cannot happen.
Question 2
What probability value means an event is certain to happen?
- A.1 represents a certain event.
- B.0
- C.1/6
- D.52
Answer: 1 represents a certain event.
A probability of 1 means the event is guaranteed.
Question 3
How many possible outcomes does a fair coin have on one flip?
- A.6
- B.2
- C.1
- D.4
Answer: A fair coin has 2 possible outcomes on a single flip.
A single fair coin flip can land is heads or tails.
Question 4
How many faces are on a standard die?
- A.8
- B.10
- C.6
- D.4
Answer: A standard die has 6 faces.
The usual die used in basic probability examples has six faces.
Question 5
How many cards are in a standard deck of playing cards?
- A.56
- B.52
- C.50
- D.54
Answer: A standard deck contains 52 cards.
The standard deck used in card games has 52 cards.
Question 6
A standard deck of cards is divided into how many suits?
- A.4
- B.2
- C.5
- D.6
Answer: There are 4 suits in a standard deck of cards.
The four suits are hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades.
Question 7
In standard poker hand rankings, which hand is the highest?
- A.four of a kind
- B.royal flush
- C.full house
- D.straight flush
Answer: A royal flush is the highest standard poker hand.
Among standard poker hands, the royal flush ranks at the top.
Question 8
Which roulette wheel has a single zero?
- A.standard die
- B.slot machine
- C.European roulette wheel
- D.American roulette wheel
Answer: A European roulette wheel has a single zero.
The fact given identifies the European roulette wheel is the one with a single zero.
Question 9
For a fair coin, what is the probability of getting heads?
- A.2
- B.1/2
- C.1
- D.1/6
Answer: The probability of heads on a fair coin is one-half.
A fair coin has two equally likely outcomes, so heads has probability 1/2.
Question 10
What is the probability of rolling a 3 on a fair six-sided die?
- A.1
- B.1/6
- C.1/2
- D.1/3
Answer: The probability is one-sixth.
Only one of the six equally likely faces is a 3, so the probability is 1/6.
Question 11
Which two values mark the endpoints of the probability scale?
- A.0 and 1 mark the endpoints of the probability scale.
- B.1 and 2
- C.0 and 100
- D.1/2 and 1
Answer: 0 and 1 mark the endpoints of the probability scale.
Probability runs from 0 for impossible to 1 for certain.
Question 12
What common betting word often appears alongside probability?
- A.faces
- B.suits
- C.axioms
- D.odds
Answer: Odds.
The term 'odds' is commonly used in betting discussions with probability.
Question 13
Bayes' theorem is named after whom?
- A.Thomas Bayes
- B.Jakob Bernoulli
- C.Andrey Kolmogorov
- D.Christiaan Huygens
Answer: Thomas Bayes.
Bayes' theorem takes its name from Thomas Bayes.
Probability Family Trivia
12 questions
These family Probability trivia questions are built for mixed-age game nights, classrooms, and groups.
Question 1
How many people are needed in the famous birthday paradox for the chance of a shared birthday to be more than 50 percent?
Answer: 23 people
The birthday paradox says that with 23 people in a group, the chance that at least two share a birthday is greater than 50 percent.
Question 2
In the Monty Hall problem, what is your chance of winning if you switch doors?
- A.1/3
- B.3/4
- C.A 2/3 chance of winning
- D.1/2
Answer: A 2/3 chance of winning
In the classic Monty Hall setup, switching gives a winning probability of 2/3.
Question 3
When a lottery machine uses a quick pick, how are the numbers chosen?
Answer: At random
A standard lottery-style quick pick is designed to choose numbers randomly.
Question 4
If you draw one card from a full 52-card deck, which card rank has a 4 out of 52 chance of appearing?
- A.A king
- B.A queen
- C.A joker
- D.Ace
Answer: An ace
There are 4 aces in a standard 52-card deck, so the chance is 4 out of 52.
Question 5
On one draw from a standard 52-card deck, which suit appears with probability 13 out of 52?
- A.Spades
- B.Diamonds
- C.Clubs
- D.Heart
Answer: Hearts
A standard deck has 13 hearts out of 52 total cards.
Question 6
When you roll two fair six-sided dice, what is the largest possible sum?
Answer: 12
Two dice can add up to any total from 2 through 12, so 12 is the maximum.
Question 7
What sum comes up most often when rolling two fair six-sided dice?
Answer: 7
Seven is the most common total from two fair dice because it can be made in the most ways.
Question 8
Flip two fair coins. What is the probability of getting at least one head?
- A.2/3
- B.3/4
- C.1/4
- D.1/2
Answer: 3/4
With two fair coin flips, three of the four equally likely outcomes include at least one head.
Question 9
A bag has 5 red marbles and 5 blue marbles. What is the chance of drawing a red marble on one pick?
- A.1/4
- B.3/4
- C.1/2
- D.1/5
Answer: 1/2
With 5 red and 5 blue marbles, half the marbles are red, so the chance is 1/2.
Question 10
What everyday report often tells you the probability that it will rain?
Answer: A weather forecast
Weather forecasts commonly express the chance of rain is a probability.
Question 11
Which business uses estimated chances of loss when setting prices?
Answer: Insurance
Insurance pricing relies on estimating the probability of loss.
Question 12
Which forecaster became widely known for election predictions built on probability models?
Answer: Nate Silver
Nate Silver became widely known for election forecasts based on probability models.
Fun Probability Trivia
13 questions
These fun Probability trivia questions highlight surprising moments and playful facts for game-night groups.
Question 1
Which randomness expert could also wow a crowd with sleight of hand, since he was once a professional magician?
- A.Persi Diaconis
- B.David Blackwell
- C.Harold Jeffreys
- D.George Boole
Answer: Persi Diaconis
Persi Diaconis is notable both for his mathematical work on randomness and for having been a professional magician.
Question 2
What is the title of Leonard Mlodinow’s popular science book about probability and chance in everyday life?
Answer: The Drunkard's Walk
Leonard Mlodinow wrote the probability-themed popular science book The Drunkard's Walk.
Question 3
Nassim Nicholas Taleb gave probability fans a memorable title. Which book did he write?
- A.Against the Gods
- B.The Black Swan
- C.Fooled by Randomness
- D.The Drunkard's Walk
Answer: Fooled by Randomness
Taleb wrote Fooled by Randomness.
Question 4
Who wrote the risk-history book Against the Gods?
Answer: Peter L. Bernstein
Against the Gods was written by Peter L. Bernstein.
Question 5
Which scholar made major contributions across the triple threat of probability, statistics, and game theory?
- A.Frank Ramsey
- B.Harold Jeffreys
- C.Andrey Markov
- D.David Blackwell
Answer: David Blackwell
David Blackwell is known for major contributions in all three areas: probability, statistics, and game theory.
Question 6
Who developed statistical decision ideas and sequential analysis during the 20th century?
Answer: Abraham Wald
Abraham Wald developed key ideas in statistical decision theory and sequential analysis.
Question 7
Which famous nurse also used statistical graphics to show mortality patterns?
- A.Florence Nightingale
- B.Ada Lovelace
- C.Marie Curie
- D.Emmy Noether
Answer: Florence Nightingale
Florence Nightingale used statistical graphics to communicate mortality data clearly.
Question 8
Whose algebra later became important in both logic and probability?
Answer: George Boole
George Boole's algebra became foundational in logic and later important in probability contexts is well.
Question 9
Which influential thinker made major contributions to subjective probability before reaching age 30?
- A.David Blackwell
- B.Abraham Wald
- C.Bruno de Finetti
- D.Frank Ramsey
Answer: Frank Ramsey
Frank Ramsey made influential contributions to subjective probability at a very young age.
Question 10
Name the major figure in Bayesian probability whose surname often pops up in discussions of priors and inference history.?
Answer: Harold Jeffreys
Harold Jeffreys was a major figure in Bayesian probability.
Question 11
Which mathematician was a leading advocate of subjective probability?
- A.Harold Jeffreys
- B.Abraham Wald
- C.Andrey Markov
- D.Bruno de Finetti
Answer: Bruno de Finetti
Bruno de Finetti is especially associated with advocating subjective probability.
Question 12
Markov chains borrow their name from which mathematician?
Answer: Andrey Markov
Andrey Markov gave his name to Markov chains.
Question 13
In a Markov chain, what does the next state depend on?
- A.Only the starting state
- B.The most common previous state
- C.Current state only
- D.The entire past history
Answer: Only the current state
A Markov chain is defined by the idea that the next state depends only on the current state.
Funny Probability Trivia
13 questions
These funny Probability trivia questions highlight playful moments, odd facts, and inside jokes.
Question 1
A roulette wheel lands on red five times in a row, and your cousin whispers, "Black is basically scheduled now." What mistaken belief is your cousin showing?
- A.Murphy's law
- B.gambler's fallacy
- C.Hot-hand belief
- D.Simpson's paradox
Answer: The gambler's fallacy.
The gambler's fallacy is the mistaken belief that a long run of one outcome makes the opposite outcome due.
Question 2
In sports debates, what belief says a player on a streak is more likely to keep succeeding?
Answer: The hot-hand belief.
The hot-hand belief claims a streaky player is more likely to keep succeeding.
Question 3
What paradox describes a trend that flips direction when you regroup the data, as if the spreadsheet pulled a prank?
Answer: Simpson's paradox.
Simpson's paradox is when a trend reverses when data are grouped differently.
Question 4
Who gave his name to Simpson's paradox?
Answer: Thomas Simpson.
Simpson's paradox is named after Thomas Simpson.
Question 5
According to Borel's theorem, if monkeys type randomly for absurdly long enough, what theorem says they could eventually produce any given text?
Answer: The infinite monkey theorem.
Borel's infinite monkey theorem says random typing could eventually produce any given text.
Question 6
What principle says that if there are enough chances, even rare events become likely to happen somewhere, which is great news if you are waiting for a very weird coincidence?
Answer: The law of truly large numbers.
The law of truly large numbers says enough opportunities make rare events likely to occur somewhere.
Question 7
What classic problem asks how many random draws you need on average to complete a full set, the natural enemy of trading cards and patience alike?
Answer: The coupon collector problem.
The coupon collector problem is about how many random draws are needed on average to collect a full set.
Question 8
You're interviewing candidates and want the best one without a time machine. Which famous puzzle is about when to stop interviewing and choose?
Answer: The secretary problem.
The secretary problem is the puzzle about when to stop interviewing and choose a candidate.
Question 9
Which paradox shows that a tiny wording change can make a simple children question about genders suddenly turn into a probability argument at dinner?
Answer: The boy-or-girl paradox.
The boy-or-girl paradox shows how wording can change an apparently simple probability question.
Question 10
A puzzle with mislabeled boxes sounds like a storage nightmare. What classic paradox is it?
Answer: Bertrand's box paradox.
Bertrand's box paradox is the classic probability puzzle involving mislabeled boxes.
Question 11
What paradox shows that in a geometry problem, different definitions of "random" can lead to different answers, which is awkward for anyone expecting one neat result?
Answer: Bertrand's paradox.
Bertrand's paradox is the geometry puzzle where different definitions of random produce different answers.
Question 12
Which modern puzzle is about self-locating probability and has one of the coziest names in the subject?
Answer: The sleeping beauty problem.
The sleeping beauty problem is a modern puzzle about self-locating probability.
Question 13
Which famous paradox is the one about expected value versus human intuition, proving your instincts can file a formal complaint?
Answer: The St. Petersburg paradox.
The St. Petersburg paradox is a famous puzzle about expected value and human intuition.
Hard Probability Trivia
14 questions
These hard Probability trivia questions are for expert fans who want a real challenge.
Question 1
In what monograph did Kolmogorov publish his probability axioms?
- A.Ars Conjectandi
- B.Théorie analytique des probabilités
- C.De ratiociniis in ludo aleae
- D.Grundbegriffe der Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung
Answer: Grundbegriffe der Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung
Kolmogorov's axioms were published in the monograph Grundbegriffe der Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung.
Question 2
Bayes' theorem first appeared in print in which year, after Bayes had already died?
- A.1812
- B.1763
- C.1705
- D.1713
Answer: 1763
Bayes' theorem was published posthumously in 1763.
Question 3
Jakob Bernoulli died in what year before Ars Conjectandi was eventually published?
- A.1812
- B.1705
- C.1713
- D.1763
Answer: 1705
Jakob Bernoulli died in 1705, several years before Ars Conjectandi appeared.
Question 4
What is the publication year of Ars Conjectandi?
- A.1763
- B.1812
- C.1713
- D.1705
Answer: 1713
Ars Conjectandi was published in 1713.
Question 5
Before becoming a theorem headline, Bayes held what ministerial post location?
- A.Berkeley
- B.Paris
- C.Tunbridge Wells
- D.Princeton
Answer: Tunbridge Wells
Thomas Bayes served is a Presbyterian minister in Tunbridge Wells.
Question 6
Which title is often cited as the first printed book on probability?
- A.Théorie analytique des probabilités
- B.De ratiociniis in ludo aleae
- C.Ars Conjectandi
- D.Grundbegriffe der Wahrscheinlichkeitsrechnung
Answer: De ratiociniis in ludo aleae
Christiaan Huygens's De ratiociniis in ludo aleae is often cited is the first printed book on probability.
Question 7
The Borel-Cantelli lemmas are named partly after which mathematician?
- A.Denis Poisson
- B.Émile Borel
- C.Simon Laplace
- D.Thomas Bayes
Answer: Émile Borel
The lemmas are named in part for Émile Borel.
Question 8
Which major result says sample averages converge almost surely under standard assumptions?
- A.conditional expectation
- B.strong law of large numbers
- C.central limit theorem
- D.martingale
Answer: strong law of large numbers
The strong law of large numbers is the result describing almost sure convergence of sample averages.
Question 9
What theorem says that sums of many independent variables often approach a normal distribution?
- A.strong law of large numbers
- B.Borel-Cantelli lemmas
- C.Bayes' theorem
- D.central limit theorem
Answer: central limit theorem
The central limit theorem describes the tendency of such sums to approach a normal distribution.
Question 10
In modern measure-theoretic probability, what core structure collects the measurable events?
- A.probability space
- B.Wiener process
- C.sigma-algebra
- D.martingale
Answer: sigma-algebra
A sigma-algebra is a core structure used in modern measure-theoretic probability.
Question 11
The standard triple consisting of sample space, sigma-algebra, and probability measure is called what?
- A.normal distribution
- B.probability space
- C.sigma-algebra
- D.conditional expectation
Answer: probability space
That three-part object is commonly written is a probability space.
Question 12
A stochastic process whose future conditional expectation equals its present value under a filtration is called a what?
- A.Wiener process
- B.sigma-algebra
- C.normal distribution
- D.martingale
Answer: martingale
That is the defining property given for a martingale.
Question 13
Brownian motion goes by what alternate process name?
- A.Gaussian field
- B.Wiener process
- C.Poisson process
- D.martingale
Answer: Wiener process
Brownian motion is also known is a Wiener process.
Question 14
The Poisson distribution is named after which scientist, given here without his full first name?
- A.Denis Poisson
- B.Émile Borel
- C.Simon Laplace
- D.Thomas Bayes
Answer: Denis Poisson
The Poisson distribution is named for Siméon Denis Poisson and uses the answer anchor Denis Poisson.
Download PDF
Get the generated PDF file for printing, classroom rounds, or offline use.
Download printable trivia PDF