60 days after December 7 is February 5th
It would fall on February 7 2011.
Adding 60 days to December 7 in any year gives February 5 of the following year.
Adding 60 days to December 2, 2010 gives January 31, 2011.
60 days before it is Friday the 5th of August 2011. 60 days after it is Saturday the 3rd of December 2011.
No, the due date of a 60-day note dated July 10 would not be September 10. Instead, it would be September 8, as you count 60 days from July 10 to arrive at the due date.
A 60-day promissory note issued on May 7, 2009, would have a maturity date of July 6, 2009. This is calculated by adding 60 days to the issue date.
The 14th of November 2010 is 60 days before the 13th of January 2011. The 14th of March 2011 is 60 days after it.
February 26, 2010 + 60 days = April 27, 2010.
60 days from January 31, 2011 is April 1, 2011.
If you add a number to a date it will take it as being an amount of days and give you a new date that is that amount of days after the first date. So if you had today's date in cell B2 and wanted to see what date it is in 60 days from now, in any other cell you could type the following formula:=B2+60
Oh, dude, within 60 days means within that time frame, so it could be before or after a certain date. It's like saying you have 60 days to do something starting from a particular point in time. So, like, as long as it happens within those 60 days, you're good to go.
February 4, 2011