An Event Is a Subset of S
An event is any subset of the sample space — a collection of outcomes.
The same event, two ways: "an even number" (characteristic) =
Name It by Category or by List
Translate the same event both ways:
| Characteristic | Roster |
|---|---|
| An even number | |
| Greater than 4 | |
| A multiple of 3 |
Each answer is a list of outcomes — never a number.
The Idea Scales to a Card Deck
Draw one card from a 52-card deck. Now
- "A heart" is a subset of 13 cards
- "A face card" is a subset of 12 cards (J, Q, K)
An event is still a subset — even when
Quick Check: List the Event
On a die, list the event "a number less than 3."
Write it as a roster — a set of outcomes — before the next slide.
Answer:
Two Events Raise Two Questions
Define two events on the die:
= "even" = = "greater than 3" =
Notice 4 and 6 are in both. Which outcomes are in either? In both?
Picture Two Events on a Venn
The sample space is the rectangle; each event is a circle.
The circles overlap because 4 and 6 belong to both events.
Union: "Or" Collects Either Event
The union
- Shared 4 and 6 are listed once
- "Or" is inclusive — both-event outcomes count
Inclusive "or" is the idea everyone trips on.
Shade the Union: Both Circles
"A or B" shades both circles fully — a large set.
Predict First: Is 4 Included?
We're forming "even or greater than 3." The outcome 4 is in both events.
- A. Yes — 4 is part of "even or greater than 3"
- B. No — 4 is in both, so it shouldn't count
Commit to A or B before advancing.
Intersection: "And" Keeps Shared Outcomes
The intersection
- Only 4 and 6 are in both events
- Smaller than either — "and" narrows down
Inclusive "or" kept 4; "and" keeps only the overlap.
Shade the Intersection: Overlap Only
"A and B" shades only the overlap — a small set.
Cards: Heart and Face Card
Let
and = the 3 heart face cards (J, Q, K of hearts) or = all 13 hearts + 9 other face cards = 22 cards
When Events Cannot Both Happen
Some event pairs have no overlap — they can't both happen.
- "Roll a 2" and "roll a 5": no outcome is in both
- These are mutually exclusive — the intersection is empty
With no overlap, inclusive and exclusive "or" agree. The overlap is what made "or" tricky.
Your Turn: Union and Intersection
On a die:
- List
or (the union) - List
and (the intersection)
Write both rosters yourself before checking. Answers:
Watch Out: Two Common Traps
Exclusive-or trap: "or" drops the overlap. Inclusive "or" keeps it.
Combine trap: "and" means "put it all together." No — "and" is both at once, the smaller set.
Predict which set is bigger before you compute.
Key Takeaways and What's Next
✓ An event is a set of outcomes — never a number
✓ Or = union = bigger set (overlap included)
✓ And = intersection = smaller set (overlap only)
Inclusive "or" keeps the overlap; "and" narrows it
Next: the complement "not," then combining all three operations.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Describe events as subsets of a sample space