January, 2012 has one full moon. Two full moons in one month only happens once in a blue moon.
If you are asking about how many full moons there have been since 19th December 2012, at the time of answering this question (Saturday 8th June 2013), there have been six full moons since 19th December 2012.
The first full weekend of 2012 is January 7-8.
The question is a little vague; I'm going to assume you mean full moons. The synodic period (the time between two full moons) averages 29.53 days, which works out to about 12.4 of them per year. In any given calendar year there are either 12 or 13 full moons. 2014 is a "12 full moons" year; 2015 will have 13.
There were 13 full moons in 1982. The number of full moons varies each year. In 1983 there were 12 full moons and in 1984 there were also 12 full moons.
It is possible to have two full moons during January, but not during February.
January 9th
A leap year, like normal years, usually has 12 full moons, but can have 13 full moons.
You do get full moons, once every 29 days.
A "blue moon" has been defined as two full moons in the same month. This can happen in any month except in February. It isn't all that rare; it happens about every other year.Two "blue moons" in the same year can only happen in January and March, which is what happens in 2018. That's because February is the only month in which it's possible to NOT have ANY full moons; February has only 28 days, and a month is 28.5 days!We can expect this (two "blue moons" in the same year) about every 31 years; any time the Moon is full on January 2, it will be full again on January 31, March 2 and March 31.
Because January 1, 2012 is on a Sunday and the NFL is playing a full schedule that day. There are no college bowl games scheduled for January 1, 2012.
There will be a total of 12 Full Moons this year, 2014.
Full Throttle Saloon - 2009 2012-01-25 was released on: USA: 25 January 2012