Leap Year occurs every four years, most of the time. There is a refined and carefully developed formula for assigning leap years to account for the fact that the year is not exactly 365.25 days long. Century years (1800, 1900) are not leap years even though they are divisible by 4. However, century years that are divisible by 400 remain leap years. Most people thought nothing of the fact that 2000 was a leap year; but we will not see another century leap year for 400 years. Footnote: Leap seconds, on the other hand, are added to or subtracted from the year as needed, as often as twice per year. No leap seconds have ever had to be subtracted to date, but every few years one is added. [Subtracting a leap second would actually be an indication that the earth's rotation is speeding up a little.] Leap seconds are not a refinement of the leap year concept and are for the most part independent of it. Leap seconds are used to adjust for the slightly irregular rotation of the earth on its axis in order to keep time in sync as much as possible with mean solar time. Currently there is discussion and debate about the need for adjusting time with leap seconds, and there is a possibility that the system will be abolished by 2013. The above is true for the Gregorian calendar - the secular calendar we know based on the sun. In other calendars - like the Jewish calendar, based on the moon, leap years are a different concept altogether and involve an extra month and a different algorithm for figuring it out.
Leap Year is a human invention, just like the rest of the calendar. If we didn't do Leap Year, then after a while, Winter would start in March, and Summer would start in September. The whole purpose of Leap Year is to keep the calendar on track with the seasons. This is because the year isn't an exact number of days; there are 365.24 days in a year.
Most of the civilized world has gotten together and agreed on how we get it done. We all agreed to make a Leap Year once every four years, and to add an extra day to February in those years.
The years when we do it are the years with numbers that are evenly divisible by 4 ... 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, etc.
An easy way to remember the Leap Years ... they're the years with Summer Olympics and US presidential elections.
Also, there is a minor exception: the even Century years ... 1800, 1900, 2100 ... are divisible by 4, but they're notLeap Years. So if you're around in 2100, remember that February 2100 will only have 28 days.
There is an exception to the exception! Century years that are divisible by 400, like 2000, ARE leap years! A Leap Year in the common Gregorian Calendar that is used in the vast majority of cultures around the world, occurs every 4 years, except on years divisible by 100, but including years divisible by 400. So for every 400 years, there exactly 99 leap years, a frequency of one leap year every 4.0404040404 years (0.2475).
Every four years.Leap year happens every four years. Leap year day is February 29.
every 4th year
a leap year occurs ever 4 years you can remember a leap year because the Olympics happen ever year it is a leap year.
Every Four Years
Every 4 years
Every leap year, on January 20
The odds of any year being a leap year with November 22 on a Thursday are 3/80 (3.75%).
2011, 2016 (leap year), 2022, 2033, 2039, 2044 (leap year), 2050, 2061, 2067, 2072 (leap year), 2078, 2089, 2095, 2101, 2107, 2112 (leap year), 2118, 2129
3080 will be a leap year.
A leap year in the Gregorian calendar occurs 97 times in every 400-year period, making the average length of a Gregorian calendar year 365.2425 days. The leap years are years that are evenly divisible by 4 with the exception of the last year of each of the first three centuries of every 400-years. So leap years are usually every four years, but most years that end with a double-zero are skipped. Here is a guide to help you determine if a year is a leap year: Is the year an even number? No: It is NOT a leap year. Yes: Is the year evenly divisible by 4? No: It is NOT a leap year. Yes: Is the year evenly divisible by 100? No: It IS a leap year. Yes: Is the year evenly divisible by 400? No: It is NOT a leap year. Yes: It IS a leap year.
1776 was a leap year
No. If the year number can be divided by four then it's a leap year. 2012=Leap year.