Tomorrow night, September 17, 2009, it will be the year 5770! Shanah tovah!
Fall 2010 - Fall 2011 is equivalent to 5771
Fall 2011 - Fall 2012 is equivalent to 5772
Fall 2012 - Fall 2013 is equivalent to 5773
Fall 2013 - Fall 2014 is equivalent to 5774
Fall 2014 - Fall 2015 is equivalent to 5775
Fall 2015 - Fall 2016 is equivalent to 5776
as of February, 2012, the current Hebrew year is 5772
Sept 2011 to Sept 2012 = 5772
On the 9th of September 2015, it is the year 5775 in the Hebrew calendar. The next year (5776) will begin on September 13, 2015, after sunset.
as of January 2013, the current Hebrew year is 5773. (China and India use the Gregorian calendar for years, so it is 2013 on both calendars).
April is not a month in the Hebrew calendar, and the Sundays in any Hebrew month could easily change from year to year, just as they often do for any month in the civil calendar.
The year 7000 on the Hebrew calendar will occur in September of the year 3240.
The Hebrew calendar year of 5772 began on September 29, 2011.
It means the same thing in Hebrew that it does in English. But if you're asking what the significance of 5773 is to Judaism, it's the new year on the Jewish calendar that begins on Sept 17, 2012. If you're asking how to write 5773 in Hebrew it's תשע״ג
There isn't any festival celebrated along with Christmas as per the Hebrew calendar, since Christmas is not tied to the Hebrew calendar. (So every year, Christmas falls on a different date on the Hebrew calendar).
April = Gregorian calendar tamuz= Hebrew calendar siyue = Chinese calendar
2060 on the Hebrew calendar was in 1700-1701 BCE.
The year is unknown, but traditionally, it's believed to have occurred around 1312 BCE which is equivalent to 2460 on the Hebrew calendar. (In actuality, although the Hebrew calendar was in use, the practice of numbering the year had not yet been introduced).
5777-577821 Sep AD 2017 = 1 Tis AM 5778
Rosh Hashanah is the New Year in the Hebrew calendar and the first of the ten Yamim Noraim or Days of Awe. It falls on the 1st day of the Hebrew month Tishrei, despite the fact that Tishrei is the seventh month of the calendar (the Hebrew calendar is considerably more complicated that the secular calendar), which is late summer/early autumn depending on the year (as the Hebrew calendar and secular calendars do not correspond, a Hebrew date will fall on different secular dates - and vice versa- each year).