In any year when May 1 falls on Tuesday - May will have 5 Tuesdays. This happened last in 2012 and will happen again in 2018.
Leap years that begin on a Monday or a Tuesday have 53 Tuesdays. Leap years that begin on any other day of the week have 52 Tuesdays. 72.165% of all leap years have 52 Tuesdays.
December can have five Sundays, Mondays, and Tuesdays only in specific years. This occurs when December 1st falls on a Sunday, making the Sundays fall on the 1st, 8th, 15th, 22nd, and 29th, while Mondays and Tuesdays also align to allow for five occurrences. This scenario happens approximately once every 28 years in the Gregorian calendar, with the next occurrence in 2030.
September can have either four or five Tuesdays, depending on the year. If September 1st falls on a Tuesday, there will be five Tuesdays that month. Otherwise, there will typically be four. For a specific year, you can check a calendar to confirm the exact number.
Five Sundays: March, June, September & December Five Mondays: April, July, September & December Five Tuesdays: January, April, July, October & December Five Wednesdays: January, May, July & October Five Thursdays: January, May, August & October Five Fridays: March, May, August & November Five Saturdays: March, June, August & November
Five years
The probability is zero since Feb 2008 had 4 Tuesdays.
Depending on context, it may mean you have not been resident in your native country for five years or you have been travelling for five years.
The Tuesdays was created in 1990.
Five years---or depends what state u live in
There is only one Tuesday in each week in 2011. What you probably meant is how many months in 2011 had 5 Tuesdays. March, May, August and November all had 5 Tuesdays in 2011, so that is 4 months.
That depends entirely on the individual, or what is happening within those five years. The first five years of a child's life may seem to fly by for the parents, while at the same time five years in prison may seem to be incredibly long in comparison.
In 2110, there will be 52 Tuesdays.