January 20th is the day the new President gets sworn in and the old President's term ends.
The old president remains President up until the moment the new President takes the oath of office. The Oath of office ceremony is on the 20th of January following the election.
i think it ends on December 3 at noon
Janaury 20th, 2013
Yes, the term President's Day (or Presidents' Day) is a proper noun when used for the name of a specifically designated day. The term 'presidents day, president's day, or presidents' day' is a common noun if it is not referring to a specifically designated day. Examples: We don't have to work on Presidents' Day. A president's day includes meeting representatives from around the world.
January 20th of any year at 12:00 Noon
January 20
The Presidential Inauguration Day is held on January 20. The term of the president officially starts at noon on that day.
He became president (second term) in 2012 so it will end in 2016.
AT NOON ON JANUARY 20TH
Washington's Birthday. There is no federal holiday called Presidents Day regardless of spelling.
It is spelled Presidents' Day.
Grammatically, Presidents' Day is NOT correct. The correct spelling should have no apostrophes at all as the day does not BELONG to the presidents, therefore it is not possessive.
The opening day of each Supreme Court term is the first Monday in October. The first Monday in October is always when a term ends.