Is it right to call a calendar of days (13 numbers and 20 names) as a calendar. Do we americans and europeans have a DAY calendar, and is it 7 days or 28 years. A week cycles only 7 years in a 365-day calendar without leap days. So does this mean a 7-year calendar exists besides the 28-year.
1 ordinary calendar year = 521/7 weeks 1 leap calendar year = 522/7 weeks
September 7 is the 250th day of the year (251st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 115 days remaining until the end of the year.
7 november 2012-wednesday
No, the Muslim calendar is a lunar calendar which has thirteen 28 day months that match the cycles of the moon. The Christian calendar is a solar calendar which has 1-28 day month, 4-30 day months, and 7-31 day months which matches the rotation of the Earth around the sun. In addition, the Christian calendar began at the birth of Christ, while the Muslim calendar began when Muhammad moved to Medina (then known as Yathrib) in the year 622.
To determine the English calendar date of Vikram Samvat 1985, month Vaishakh, Vad Tithi 7, we need to convert the Vikram Samvat year to the Gregorian calendar. Vikram Samvat 1985 corresponds to the year 1928-1929 AD in the Gregorian calendar. Vaishakh is the second month of the Hindu calendar, typically falling in April-May in the Gregorian calendar. Vad Tithi 7 corresponds to the seventh day of the dark fortnight in the Hindu lunar calendar. Therefore, the English calendar date of Vikram Samvat 1985, month Vaishakh, Vad Tithi 7 is around late April or early May in 1929 AD.
It was a Saturday - according to my Windows calendar !
No. Because leap years cause a day to be skipped, the calendar is not repeated every 7 years.
Yes
It was the 7 month of the year.
Your Windows calendar could have told you - it was a Thursday.
The calendar shifts one day each year due to the discrepancy between the solar year (365.24 days) and the calendar year (365 days). To account for this, we have a leap year every four years, adding an extra day to February. This adjustment helps keep our calendar in alignment with the Earth's orbit around the sun.