8 years
There are 4 years between every leap year. Correction: There are 4 years between MOST leap years. That's the case 99.25% of the time. For the other 0.75% of the time, there are 8 years between leap years.
Yes. Basically, the years that are multiples of 4 are leap years (with some exceptions at the end of a century).
2100 is not a leap year, because it is not divisible by 400, although divisible by 4 and by 100. So from 2096 to 2104, there will be an 8 year gap between leap years.
7 leap years!
3900
18,262 including leap years 365(days in a year) x 50(years) + 12(amount of leap years between that time period) hope this helps
61 years
As of and including 2012, there have been twelve leap years since 1966. Simply taking the number of elapsed years and dividing by four will only get you the correct answer part of the time, since it mathematically assumes the year before you start counting is a leap year.
Ah, what a happy little question! Between 1792 and 2000, there were 52 leap years. Leap years occur every 4 years to keep our calendars in harmony with the Earth's orbit around the sun. Just like adding a touch of titanium white to brighten up a painting, leap years add a little extra time to our calendar to keep everything running smoothly.
usually 4 years (2008-2012); sometimes 8 years (2096-2104)
A leap year is singular--it only occurs ONE time and ONLY in that year. (One) Leap Year occurs every 4 years.
The winter Olympics are never held during a leap year, they occur mostly in February of even-numbered non leap years. The summer Olympics occur in leap years (most of the time), with the exception of century years like 1900 and 2100, which are not leap years.