Yes. All Jewish holidays end at sunset.
"Sunset, December 21 to sunset, December 29 The first Day of Hanukkah was December 22."
Hanukkah begins at sunset on Tuesday, December 20, 2011. You should light your first candle this night.
No, there are eight. In 2012, Hanukkah begins at sunset on Saturday night, December 8, and ends at sunset on Sunday night, December 16. In 2013, Hanukkah begins at sunset on Wednesday, November 27, and ends at sunset on Thursday, December 5.
It will begin at sunset on the 8th of December 2012.
Hanukkah 2008 occurred from sunset Sunday December 21st, until the evening of Monday, December 29th, 2008. The dates are according to the Hebrew calendar and are not the same each year according to the civil (Gregorian) dates.
Since Hanukkah has yet to begin, the current number is 0. Hanukkah will begin at sunset on Tuesday, December 20, 2011.
There is no special ending for the celebration of Hanukkah.
Hanukkah began at sunset on Wednesday, 1 December 2010 and ended at sunset on Thursday, 9 December 2010. From (the early hours of) 1 April 2010 it was 244 days.
On exactly the same dates as all over the rest of the world. Hanukkah in 2013 is November 27-December 5. Candles are lit at or after sunset.
The candles are put into the Hanukkiah (Hanukkah-menorah) starting on the first evening) of Hanukkah. The candles are lit in the early evening after sunset or later.
If you light the yahrzeit candle before it's time to light the Hanukkah-menorah, you may light the yahrzeit candle first. Otherwise, once it's past sunset, you should wait until about 20 minutes after sunset, light the Hanukkah-menorah, and afterwards light the yahrzeit candle.
Eight days, from the evening on December 6 to the late afternoon on December 14. The first candle was lit on Dec.6, and all eight were lit on Dec.13, starting the eighth day.See also:More about Hanukkah