未必有之事
... 未必有unlikelihood 未必有之事improbability 未编辑的unedited ...
不大可能的事物
... 不大好的poorish 不大可能的事物improbability 不大离儿prettyclosejustaboutrightnotbad ...
未必存在
... imprinter印码器 improbability未必存在 impropercharacter非法字符 ...
[数] 非概率性
... imprimitive 非本原的 improbability 非概率性 improper conic 退化二次曲线 ...
词根:improbable
adj.
improbable不大可能的,未必确实的;不可信的;未必会发生的
adv.
improbably不象真实地;未必会地
Probability is the measure of the likeliness that an event will occur.Probability is used to quantify an attitude of mind towards some proposition of whose truth we are not certain. The proposition of interest is usually of the form "Will a specific event occur?" The attitude of mind is of the form "How certain are we that the event will occur?" The certainty we adopt can be described in terms of a numerical measure and this number, between 0 and 1 (where 0 indicates impossibility and 1 indicates certainty), we call probability. Thus the higher the probability of an event, the more certain we are that the event will occur. A simple example would be the toss of a fair coin. Since the 2 outcomes are deemed equiprobable, the probability of "heads" equals the probability of "tails" and each probability is 1/2 or equivalently a 50% chance of either "heads" or "tails".These concepts have been given an axiomatic mathematical formalization in probability theory (see probability axioms), which is used widely in such areas of study as mathematics, statistics, finance, gambling, science (in particular physics), artificial intelligence/machine learning, computer science, and philosophy to, for example, draw inferences about the expected frequency of events. Probability theory is also used to describe the underlying mechanics and regularities of complex systems.