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Solution 1.
Let
E = event that at least one is a consonant.
Let’s compute
E c = event that neither is a consonant
instead and then use
P (E) = 1 − P (E c ).
Let A be event that the first card is a consonant and B be event that the second card is a
consonant. The event E c is the event that the first card is not a consonant and the second
card is not a consonant, so
E c = Ac ∩ B c .
5 4
Note that Ac and B c are dependent, and P (Ac ) = 26 and P (B c | Ac ) = 25 . Thus
5 4 2
P (Ac ∩ B c ) = × = .
26 25 65
Thus
2 63
P (E) = 1 − = .
65 65
Note 1. We were after the probability of E = A ∪ B. Instead, we computed the probability
of E c = (A ∪ B)c and what we really did is use DeMorgan’s law to write (A ∪ B)c = Ac ∩ B c .
Solution 2.
Let
E = event that at least one is a consonant.
Let A be event that the first card is a consonant and B be event that the second card is
a consonant. , so
E = A ∪ B.
Now A and B are not independent, so recall that
P (A ∪ B) = P (A) + P (B) − P (A ∩ B).
1
Now the unconditional probability of A or B is P (A) = P (B) = 21 26
. Also, we can compute
21 20
P (A ∩ B) = P (A)P (A | B) = × .
26 25
Therefore,
21 21 21 20 42 · 25 − 21 · 20 63
P (E) = + − × = = .
26 26 26 25 26 · 25 65
(This was not hard at all to simplify)
Solution 3.
Let
E = event that at least one is a consonant.
Let’s compute
E c = event that neither is a consonant
instead and then use
P (E) = 1 − P (E c ).
Now let’s compute P (E c ) in a different way. E c is the eventthat
neither card is a conso-
26
nant, or equivalently, that both cards are vowels. There are ways to choose 2 cards
2
5
out of 26, and there are ways to choose 2 vowels out of 5. Therefore,
2
5 5!
5! 2! 24! 2
P (E c ) = 26
2
= 2!26!3! = = .
2 2! 24!
2! 3! 26! 65
(This was not hard at all to simplify)
Therefore,
2 63
P (E) = 1 − = .
65 65