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At Frosty Freeze, 1414 of the last 1818 sundaes sold had nuts. What is the experimental probability that the next sundae sold will have nuts?\newline Write your answer as a fraction or whole number.\newlineP(nuts)=___P(\text{nuts}) = \_\_\_

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Q. At Frosty Freeze, 1414 of the last 1818 sundaes sold had nuts. What is the experimental probability that the next sundae sold will have nuts?\newline Write your answer as a fraction or whole number.\newlineP(nuts)=___P(\text{nuts}) = \_\_\_
  1. Identify sundaes sold: Identify the total number of sundaes sold and how many had nuts.\newlineNumber of sundaes with nuts =14= 14\newlineTotal sundaes sold =18= 18\newlineCalculate the probability using the formula:\newlineP(nuts)=Number of sundaes with nutsTotal sundaes soldP(\text{nuts}) = \frac{\text{Number of sundaes with nuts}}{\text{Total sundaes sold}}\newline=1418= \frac{14}{18}
  2. Calculate probability: Simplify the fraction to its lowest terms.\newlineP(nuts)=1418P(\text{nuts}) = \frac{14}{18}\newline=79= \frac{7}{9} (Divide both numerator and denominator by 22)

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