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Matching Numbers Prize Odds of winning 3 numbers: £2.50: 56.65592 to 1 4 numbers: £25: 1,032.397 to 1 5 numbers: £250: 55,491.33 to 1 5 numbers and bonus ball: £25,000: 2,330,636 to 1 6 numbers: £250,000: 13,983,815 to 1 The overall odds of winning any prize is 52.65514 to 1 per draw. The overall odds of winning any prize is 10.13855 to 1 ...
CHF 70.1 million was the largest jackpot in Switzerland's Swiss Lotto, won by 3 winning tickets on 17 December 2016. [81] CHF 64.6 million (US$72.8 million) was the largest winner in Switzerland's Swiss Lotto, won on 2 March 2024. [81] £35.1 million (US$49.6 million) was the largest winner on the UK Lotto game in April 2016.
For a score of n (for example, if 3 choices match three of the 6 balls drawn, then n = 3), () describes the odds of selecting n winning numbers from the 6 winning numbers. This means that there are 6 - n losing numbers, which are chosen from the 43 losing numbers in () ways. The total number of combinations giving that result is, as stated ...
A jackpot of €190 million (£170.2 million) was won by a single ticket holder in the UK bearing the winning numbers - 7,10,15,44,49 and the lucky numbers 3,12. The highest jackpot ever won in the UK, and second highest jackpot to date, was £195,707,000 (€230,300,000), on 19 July 2022.
9m 49s 1898: Drogheda 6 10-12 John Gourley Dick Dawson: C. G. M. Adams 25/1 9m 43.6s 1899: Manifesto: 11 12-07 George Williamson Willie Moore John Bulteel 5/1 9m 49.8s 1900: Ambush II 6 11-03 Algy Anthony Algy Anthony Prince of Wales: 4/1 10m 1.4s 1901: Grudon 11 10-00 Arthur Nightingall Bernard Bletsoe Bernard Bletsoe 9/1 9m 47.8s 1902
Horse people know something that we don't. Horses are unlike any other animals. They're totally unique. They even have unique personalities. Like one palomino horse who his owner jokes is just ...
49 and 94 are the only numbers below 100 whose all permutations are composites but they are not multiples of 3, repdigits or numbers which only have digits 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 8, even excluding the trivial one digit terms. 49 = 7^2 and 94 = 2 * 47 The number of prime knots with 9 crossings is 49. [3]
The UK singles chart is a weekly record chart which for most of its history was based on single sales from Sunday to Saturday in the United Kingdom. [1] The chart was founded in 1952 by Percy Dickins of New Musical Express (NME), who telephoned 20 record stores to ask what their top 10 highest-selling singles were.