The year MUST start on a Sunday. For a leap year, it can start on Saturday or Sunday.
In any period of 400 years there are 303 non-leap years, of which 43 begins and ends with a Sunday, and there are 97 leap years, of which 28 begins with a Saturday or a Sunday.
So the probability in a non-leap year is 43/303, or 14.2%.
And the probability in a leap year is 28/97, or 28.9%
Assuming you choose a leap year among a number of years that's a multiple of 2800, the exact probability is 5/7. Otherwise, it will be skewed.
71.13% (69/97)
14.19% of all non-leap years have 53 Sundays.
7/2
A Leap year has 366 days. in which you have 52 weeks and 2 days. the 2 days may be sun,Mon mon,Tue tue,wed wed,THu, thu,Fri FRi,SAT sat,sun so you have 7 options among which 2 u can choose.. so the answer is 2/7 for having 53 Sundays. The probability of having 53 Thursdays is also 2/7. The probability of having either 53 Sundays or 53 Thursdays is 4/7.
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Not counting 2012, the most recent year with 53 Sundays was 2006.
There were 53 Sundays in the year 2000.
A leap year is 52 weeks plus 2 days. That means that 2 days have 53 instances. So there is a 2/7 chance that there will be 53 Fridays. There is absolutely no chance that there are 54 Sundays, since 53 is the most you can have. Good luck. The exact probability is 28/97, which is about 28.87%.
probability = 2/7 to be exact, 28/97 (about 28.87%)
There are either 52 or 53 Sundays in a leap year, depending on which day of the week it starts. If it starts on a Sunday or on a Saturday, there will be 53 Sundays, otherwise there are 52.
No.
That depends on the year. There are always at least 52 Saturdays and 52 Sundays in a year, so most years there are 104 in total. Some years there can be 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays, in which case the total is 105. There can also be 52 Sundays and 53 Saturdays, again giving a total of 105. If a leap year starts on a Saturday, then there are 53 Saturdays and 53 Sundays, so there are 106 in total.
Either 52 or 53, depending on what day of the week a year starts and sometimes if it is a leap year. In 2010 and 2011 there will be 52 Sundays, but there will be 53 in 2012.
Either 52 or 53, depending on what day of the week a year starts and sometimes if it is a leap year. In 2010 and 2011 there will be 52 Sundays, but there will be 53 in 2012.
There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.There were 53 Sundays and 52 Saturdays in 2012.