In the north, yes.
i worked as a clerk for a period of six months in a private firm .
I think it depends on what you're saying. eg. A six-month-old rabbit or. A rabbit that's six months' old.
Around the Earth's poles there is a region called the Arctic or the Antarctic where there is a period of weeks or months during which the Sun never rises. At places just beyond the Arctic and Antarctic circles the period is quite short, for example six weeks at Harstad, Norway which is 200km north of the Arcric circle. Near the poles the period is nearer six months.
Not really. In theory, at the north and south poles there are six months of daylight and six months of darkness. In practice, because the Sun is not a point source, what it really amounts to is that near the poles there's a long (but not six months long) period where the sun never rises above the horizon, and a long (but not six months long) period where the sun never fully sets BELOW the horizon, and in between the two are days where the sun does rise (at least partially) and fully set on a 24-hour cycle, but it may never get fully dark or fully light, with the sun just sort of hanging out near the horizon the whole "day".
Because the sun does not rise for six months
None of it. A six month day can only occur at the north or south pole. Neither of these is in Norway.
At these precise circles on the earth, the sun does rise and set once each 24 hour period.However, moving closer to the pole in both cases, there is at least one 24-hour period with no sun rise.At the poles, the sun rises once about every six months, then it sets about once every six months.
Sweden has the harshest penalties for human trafficking, including a six months imprisonment and this targets the purchaser only. In Norway similar legislation is taking place.
Six Months in Mexico was created in 1888.
Six Months of Darkness Six Months of Light - 1997 was released on: USA: 22 September 1997 (Long Island Film Festival)
Norway.
Six Months in Mexico has 205 pages.