The correct fill up is event. The set of outcomes of an experiment is termed as an event.
An event is collection of one or more outcomes from an experiment.
Event is called one or more outcomes of an experiment. Example: rolling a dice, we get a possible outcomes as {1,2,3,4,5,6}.
Sample Point. A sample point is the most basic outcome of an experiment. Sample Space. The Sample Space of an experiment is the collection of all its sample points.
Since individual outcomes may be of little practical interest, or because there may be prohibitively (even infinitely) many of them, outcomes are grouped into sets of outcomes that satisfy some condition, which are called "events." The collection of all such events is a sigma-algebra.
Compound Event – An event that is comprised of two or more simple events. Generally, compound events are written in terms of their simple events.
In probability, events are the outcomes of an experiment.
A random experiment that has exactly two (mutually exclusive) possible outcomes is known as a Bernoulli trial.
So, any outcome or collection of outcomes taken from a sample space is called event.
An outcome is a result of a random experiment. The set of all possible outcomes is called the sample space.
The sample space of a random experiment is the collection of all possible outcomes. An event associated with a random experiment is a subset of the sample space.
A result of an experiment is called an outcome. The sample space of an experiment is the set of all possible outcomes.