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A leap year has 366 days.
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Will you lot stop biting! :rolleyes:
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BITCHES :lol1:
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Originally Posted by chrispurvis100
(Post 8331769)
Will you lot stop biting! :rolleyes:
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Originally Posted by Boro
(Post 8331718)
A leap year has 366 days.
There is 1 extra day every year. ie 52 x 7 does not equal 365 ;) |
Originally Posted by Mitchy260
(Post 8331842)
Yes but it has nothing to do with leap years as that only takes into account 1 extra day every 4years.
There is 1 extra day every year. ie 52 x 7 does not equal 365 ;) |
What about leap seconds:wonder: :D
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what year is christmas on?
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Originally Posted by samcowrx
(Post 8332780)
what year is christmas on?
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Originally Posted by samcowrx
(Post 8332780)
what year is christmas on?
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ethiopia has thirteen months
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Originally Posted by scarey
(Post 8332914)
ethiopia has thirteen months
how would that work on a 3 month visa? :D |
Every year that is exactly divisible by four is a leap year except for years that are exactly divisible by 100 (even centuries)
Centurial years that are exactly divisible by 400 are still leap years. For example, the year 1900 (centurial year) was not a leap year, the year 2000 (centurial year divisible by 400) was a leap year. The Gregorian solar calendar is an arithmetical calendar. It counts days as the basic unit of time, grouping them into years of 365 or 366 days and repeats completely every 146,097 days which fill 400 years, Which also happens to be 20,871 seven-day weeks. Of these 400 years, 303 (the "common years") have 365 days, and 97 (the leap years) have 366 days. This gives an average year length of exactly 365.2425 days, or 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes and 12 seconds. :thumb: :hjtwofing |
Bee in my bonnet about the spelling on here this morning, sorry.
HOW, somebody tell me, can you think "their" is the right version to use when asking "If there are..."?? No offence but do you read absolutely nothing of any substance, or just not notice the words in front of you? |
i was thinking the same thing last night :(
this place needs Telboy in the evenings, thats when everything slips :) |
Another forum I'm on is much more anal about it and rightly so IMO, some peoples spelling is absolutely atrocious!
Grammar is where I normally fall down. :D |
More good news...
2008 is going to be a second longer :D 2008 to be extended by one second - space - 09 December 2008 - New Scientist |
Originally Posted by ChunkyDunky
(Post 8332616)
What about leap seconds:wonder: :D
Or was it to subtle, or esoteric.:rolleyes: :) |
Chunky, sorry to butt in AGAIN, but it's too subtle, right? You know that, right? Or you don't? There's a difference between to and too, yeah?
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haha, you tell him Telboy..
Or if I was a thick oik.. "That'll learn him" |
Originally Posted by Fuzz
(Post 8333188)
Every year that is exactly divisible by four is a leap year except for years that are exactly divisible by 100 (even centuries)
Centurial years that are exactly divisible by 400 are still leap years. For example, the year 1900 (centurial year) was not a leap year, the year 2000 (centurial year divisible by 400) was a leap year. The Gregorian solar calendar is an arithmetical calendar. It counts days as the basic unit of time, grouping them into years of 365 or 366 days and repeats completely every 146,097 days which fill 400 years, Which also happens to be 20,871 seven-day weeks. Of these 400 years, 303 (the "common years") have 365 days, and 97 (the leap years) have 366 days. This gives an average year length of exactly 365.2425 days, or 365 days, 5 hours, 49 minutes and 12 seconds. :thumb: :hjtwofing |
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