Thank you, all explanations above are helpful and make sense. FWIW, another way to think about it is noticing in the question "at least" - which to me rings a bell to try using the complement to solve.
So looking at the first element of "at least one 5" the complement would be the probability of not rolling a 5 on either roll:
5/6 (1,2,3,4 and 6 out of 6 possibilities) times 5/6 (same logic as first roll) which gets you 25/36; this represents the probability of NOT rolling a 5 on either/both rolls
So then subtracting 25/36 from 1 gets you 11/36 or the probability of
just rolling a 5 on at least one dice
Now the 2nd element of rolling no 6's - again thinking about the complement of how you can roll a 6: there are just three ways you can roll a 6 using two dice: 1) one 6 on the first and no 6 on the second 2) no six on the first and one 6 on the second or 3) 6's on both dice
However, we know from the first part of the problem that we're looking for the probability of rolling at least one 5, so the last possibility of the 2nd element (rolling two 6's) can't be an outcome because then the first element wouldn't be satisfied
Therefore, we only have two ways for which we can roll a 6.
So to tie it all together we have 11 ways of rolling a 5 on at least one dice, however these 11 ways include the possibility of rolling a 6 on one of the dice that is NOT a 5. Thus we must subtract out these 2 ways which gets us 9 possible ways of rolling a 5 on at least one dice (element 1) and no 6's (element 2)
9/36 simplifies to 1/4
D is your answer