That can only happen when December starts on a Sunday. That happens every 5, 6 or 11 years. In the past 50 years it happened in:
1968
1974
1985
1991
1996
2002
2013
The next time will be in 2019, 6 years after 2013.
A month can contain 5 Sundays, 5 Mondays, and 5 Tuesdays only if it has at least 29 days. This situation occurs in months with 31 days when the month starts on a Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday. Therefore, it can happen once or twice a year, depending on the calendar configuration.
Whenever December begins on a Saturday, which happens 4 times every 28 years, in a 6-5-6-11 pattern. December had this calendar in 1984, 1990, 2001 and 2007, and it will recur in 2012, 2018 and 2029.
probability = 2/7 to be exact, 28/97 (about 28.87%)
The Lectionary is a number of large books which contain all the readings necessary for any Mass. There are usually three volumes that contain the readings for Sundays and Holy Days, and an additional three volumes that contain all the readings for the weekday Masses and various Votive Masses.
Take your pick! January: The other three are not at the start of the modern calendar. February: The other three contain 31 days. March: The other three contain 3 vowels. December: The other three contain "ar".
6 months: January February June July August December
No, only the "war years" from October 1942 to December 1945 had any silver.
A Leap year has 366 days. in which you have 52 weeks and 2 days. the 2 days may be sun,Mon mon,Tue tue,wed wed,THu, thu,Fri FRi,SAT sat,sun so you have 7 options among which 2 u can choose.. so the answer is 2/7 for having 53 Sundays. The probability of having 53 Thursdays is also 2/7. The probability of having either 53 Sundays or 53 Thursdays is 4/7.
Luther and December are correctly capitalized.
A byte is a measure of the storage capacity of computer memory.A hertz is a measure of a recurring cycle - the number of cycles per second the computer can handle.One does not 'contain' the other.This is like asking"How many Tuesdays are in a Litre?"
Manic Monday, The BanglesMonday, Monday, The Mamas and the PapasRainy Days and Mondays, The CarpentersBlue Monday, New OrderI Don't Like Mondays, the Boomtown RatsMonday Morning, Pulp
Northern Rock Loans made news in December 2012 after it wrote letters to some of its customers that did not contain the customer's original loan figure. The absence of this detail violated the Consumer Credit Act. As a result, the bank refunded thousands of dollars to 400,000 of its customers.