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If there were no leap years this would occur only every 7 years (as there are 52 weeks and 1 day in each non-leap year). In reality you will have 53 pay periods (or 27 pay periods if you are a fortnightly payer) every 5 or 6 years. E.g. In Australia... If your payday is Thursday this year (2010) you will have 53 pay periods this financial year in Australia (1st July to 30 June), the next time this will occur is in the 2016 financial year.
A 365 day year is one week and one day. That means that the first and last day of the year are the same day of the week. So whatever day the year starts on, will have 53 of them and all other days will have 52. If a year starts on a Thursday, then there will be 53 Thursdays in that year. In the case of a leap year. The first and second day of the year will have 53 occurrences. So if a leap year starts on a Wednesday or Thursday there will be 53 Thursdays. If it starts on a Wednesday, there will also be 53 Wednesdays, and if it starts on a Thursday, there will also be 53 Fridays.
Not counting 2012, the most recent year with 53 Sundays was 2006.
The total number of days in a leap year is 366. Then, if we want to determine the probability of 53 Wednesdays occurring in a leap year, we write 53 / 366.
53 years ago
52 is the normal in a year, but if the 1st of January is a Saturday there are 53 and if the 2nd of January in a leap year is a Saturday, there are 53.
Depends on what you're loading.
In most years there are 52 Mondays, but in every year that ends on a Monday, there are 53.
Since this is 2012, a leap year, there are two days of the week we have the most of. There are 53 Sundays and 53 Mondays. There are 52 of all the rest of the days this year. Any non leap year there are 53 of whatever the first day of the year is on and 52 of the rest.
Since there are 52 weeks in a year usually there are 52 Wednesdays in a year. If the year starts on a Wednesday, then there are 53 Wednesdays. If it is a leap year that starts on a Tuesday, it will have 53 Wednesdays.
There are 53 weeks in the financial year 2012 - 2013. A financial year is also known as a fiscal year and there can be 52 or 53 weeks depending on the year.
On your birthday in 2010, your age would change from 52 to 53. If your birthday has already passed this year you are 53 but if it is not you are still 52 but will turn 53 by the end of the year.