Before Christ, obviously they didn't say for example "We are in the year 10 before Christ". They used other reference points for the calendars, for example, year so-and-so after a certain emperor.
Many didn't - or counted years from the reign of some king, or counted months as years (as in The Bible).
A winter count was an illustrated calender that was usually painted on an animal hide.
you could use a calender to count off the days.
Different people used different systems. The Romans, for example, said The first year of Vespasian to refer to the first year when Vespasian was the emperor. Or they just used their own calender, like the Korean calender started long before the AD/BC calender, so they used that. Before the Koreans had a calender, they didn't record dates at all. Not many calenders have a before and after, like the AD/BC one.
1. you will identify if is it mass nouns or count nouns by this way: count nouns:nouns that you can count......you will identify that if you can count that thing or noun ex: 5 containers mass nouns:nouns that can not be counted......you will identify it if you can not count that noun like liquids ex: leaves on a tree clouds in the sky
That is to identify a person. Here is wisdom, let him who have understanding count the number of the beast. For his number is 27 27 27 (9,9,9).
go look at the calender a count for your self.
No. on a gregorian calender, there are 365 days, 366 if it is a leap year.
A tree diagram is the way to identify and count all possible outcomes.
That is to identify a person. Here is wisdom, let him who have understanding count the number of the beast. For his number is 27 27 27 (9,9,9).
A hand made carved calender/ or count minutes if you know what time it is when you left.
They invented a calender based on the moons and stars
I think it does.