bimonthly can be used to mean this. Since bimonthly can also refer to "twice a month",it needs to be used with caution.
Quarterly (in other words 12 months divided by 4)
Quarterly
Short term liabilities have a 'life span' of 12 months or less. Long term liabilities have a 'life span' of greater than 12 months.
From an accounting perspective, short-term investments have a life cycle of less than 12 months; long term investments have a life cycle of 12 months or longer.
It means twice a month. For example, we pay our water and electricity bills bi-monthly.
A publication that's published every two months is a bi-monthly. That would be six issues per year. There was some abiguity in the past with the term sometimes being used to mean both twice a month and every two months. There was a gradual shift in the late twentieth century to that term being used to indicate every two months.
A bimonthly magazine is published every two months.
The term for the developing organism between two months of development and birth is fetus.
Quarterly.Quarterly.Quarterly.Quarterly.
According to the online Oxford Dictionaries, "bimonthly" can refer to something occurring every two months or twice in one month. It might be best to just say "every two months" to avoid confusion.
Biennial means every two years.
bimonthly
Smoking weed every two months as a 14 year old, can effect your brain by causing short-term memory loss. Additional side effects include a distorted sense of time, paranoia, and anxiety and depression.
every 3 months is a regular schedual, when you start you have to give them it twice. Once, then again in two weeks, after that its every 3 months.
An event that occurs bimonthly happens every two months or twice a month, depending on the context. It is important to clarify the specific frequency when using the term "bimonthly."
A term for something that occurs every eighteen months is "biennial." However, more specifically, to denote an interval of eighteen months, you might use the term "semiannual" to imply a frequency of twice a year, though it does not precisely match the eighteen-month interval. Another option is "18-month cycle."
Every day falls in one of twelve different months (thirteen months in some years of lunisolar calendars like the Jewish calendar).