No. There are 52 weeks in a year.
There are 35 days in 5 weeks, and no months have more than 31 days. So on that basis, no month can ever have 5 weeks. However, a month can be spread over part of 5 or even 6 different calendar weeks, like if a month of 30 or 31 days began on a Saturday. With the exception of February in a non-leap year, every month will be in a least part of 5 calendar weeks. In different years different months will do that, as when months start changes from year to year.
In any given calendar year, the date five weeks after July 8 is August 17.
Yes
There were 52 weeks and 1 day in 2011. It started on a Saturday, which would be part of one calendar week, and then had 52 weeks after that, so there were 53 Saturdays in 2011 and 52 of all other days.
A year is 52 weeks. 5 weeks is 5/52 of one year.
A year has 52 week, therefore 5 weeks is 5/52 year (which is approx 0.096 year).
Actually, there are 53 in 2009 due to the leap week; For more information, see the following links:1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601 2. http://www.phys.uu.nl/~vgent/calendar/isocalendar.htm 3. http://www.personal.ecu.edu/mccartyr/isowdcal.html 4. Calendar week number defined (according to ISO 8601:2004, see 2.2.10 (http://isotc.iso.org/livelink/livelink/4021199/ISO_8601_2004_E.zip?func=doc.Fetch&nodeid=4021199)): ordinal number which identifies a calendar week within its calendar year according to the rule that the first calendar week of a year is that one which includes the first Thursday of that year and that the last calendar week of a calendar year is the week immediately preceding the first calendar week of the next calendar year ------------- The answer above is incorrect - 2009 is not a leap year, and even if it was there are not 53 FULL weeks, or anything close to that. All normal years (non-leap years) contain 52 weeks and one day and leap years contain 52 weeks and 2 days. The answer above only answers the LABELLING system of each day in the year, and as such the last 1 day in a normal year and the last 2 days in a leap year are laballed as the 53rd week of the year. Either way, it doesn't answer the question asked. Now... Every 31 day month (namely January, March, May, July, August October and December) contains 4 weeks and 3 days or 4.42857 weeks (to 5 decimal points). Every 30 day month (namely April, June, September and November) contains 4 weeks and 2 days or 4.2857 weeks (to 5 decimal points). And February contains an even 4 weeks exactly for 2009 as in 2009 February has 28 days. Lastly, if you are looking for the AVERAGE number of weeks in every month in 2009 (and any other non-leap year), this would be 4.34524 weeks - to 5 decimal points (or roughly 4 weeks and 2.4 days in every month).
There are 52 weeks in a year because a year is 365 days long (or 366 in a leap year), which divides evenly into 52 weeks. Months have varying lengths to align with the natural lunar cycle, resulting in some months having 4 weeks and others having 5 weeks.
The length of a regular year is 52 weeks and 1 day; the length of a leap year is 52 weeks and 2 days. The word week in this context means simply a 7-day period. It does not necessarily mean a calendar week, the period from Sunday through Saturday. For example, 2013 has 51 full calendar weeks, with five days before the first full week of the year and three days after the last full week of the year. 5 + (51 x 7) + 3 = (52 x 7) + 1 Given the frequency of leap year days, the average number of weeks per year is exactly 52.1775.
October has 4 full weeks and a few additional days, depending on the year. Since October has 31 days, it typically spans over 5 weeks on the calendar. However, the exact count of weeks can vary slightly based on which day of the week October starts.
73 weeks.
52 weeks = 1 year and 20 weeks = 5 months so it would be 1 year 5 months.