In winter, yes.
No. This only occurs at the poles. Northern Norway (Svalbard) has 5 months of continuous daylight from mid-April to September and 5 months continuous night from late October to March.
What time of day? What season of the year? What month?
From the first day to the last day, inclusive, of the given month
In astronomy, a day is the time it takes for a planet to rotate once on its axis. A month is the time it takes for the moon to orbit around a planet. A year is the time it takes for a planet to orbit around its star.
NO COUNTRY has six-month day and six-month night. That only happens at the north and south poles, and the poles are not part of any country.
A average Truck Driving job in Norway, someone get paid for each day, from 1100NOK and up to 2000NOK per day. Someone get paid with 15-30% of what the truck get in each month. I guess in average sallary in Norway is about 35000NOK, and then theres taxes and so..
Norway does celebrate boxing day on December 26.
yes sometime when its that time of the month
It does not. Only northern Norway is within the Arctic Circle and can experience more than 24 hours of continuous day or night. Only the North Pole and South Pole have 6 months of day and nearly 6 months of night. Svalbard, Norway (latitude 78.4° N) does have a greatly extended period of "midnight sun" during the summer. For 5 months from April to September, the sun circles the horizon and never sets. (see the related question)
The phrase "per month or part thereof" typically means that a charge or fee is applied for each complete month or any portion of a month. For instance, if a service is billed monthly, and you use it for even a single day in that month, you would still be charged for the entire month. This wording ensures that the billing is straightforward, capturing any use in that time frame, regardless of how long it lasted.
for example, in a job you can either work full time, every day of the week all day, or part time, when you work half the day every day.