The shortest day of the year is the first day of Winter, but the days start to get longer through the first day of Spring - when days and nights are equal - until the first day of Summer, which is the longest day and shortest night. From there, the days start to shorten through the first day of Autumn (or Fall) when the days and nights are again equal. The days continue to shorten until the first day of Winter when the cycle repeats itself. So, the seasons that have days that are shorter than nights will be Autumn and Winter.
Typically, its the winter season.
Summer
winter and spring
During summer, the days are long and the nights are short. During winter, the days are short and the nights are long.
They are around the same length as days on Earth.
I think Summer. I really don't know but in Fall u turn back 1 hr. So, it might be Summer.
Antarctica has its short days and long nights in June which is when it is wintertime there To see when Antactica has its longest days and other stuff about it, see the related link
The northernmost countries of Europe: Norway, Sweden Finland and Iceland. The further north you go the longer the days are in summer, and the longer the nights are in winter.
The dogs are hungry. The days are long and the nights are short.
The lengths of days and nights in the desert are the same as with any area of the world at the same latitude. In the summer the nights are short while in the winter the nights are long. Over a year's period they average 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness per day.
89 days
for 40 days and nights
for 40 days and nights
The northern and southern hemispheres get exactly equal hours of sunlight. In the course of a year, it amounts to exactly 50% of the year everywhere. It's just that the long days, long nights, short days, and short nights happen at different times in the two hemispheres. But it all evens out over a year.
About 121 Earth days