Oh, dude, you can use a 1989 calendar again in the year 2021. Yeah, like, calendars repeat every 28 years because of the way days of the week and leap years work. So, if you've been holding onto that vintage '89 calendar, it's finally time to bust it out and relive the glory days.
As of 2018, the next time you can use a 1998 calendar again is in 2026.
As of 2018, the next time you can use a 1987 calendar is in 2026.
Calendar for 1989 can be found in calendarlabs.com
As of 2018, the next time you can use a 1985 calendar is in 2019. It can also be used again in 2030, 2041, 2047, 2058, 2069. 2075, 2086, and 2097.
A 2008 calendar can be used again in the years that have the same pattern of days as 2008. This occurs every 11 years, as long as the year is not a leap year. Therefore, the next year that has the same calendar pattern as 2008 will be 2019, and then again in 2030, 2041, and so on.
The next time the 1996 calendar can be reused is in 2024.
The year 2000 was a leap year, so the use of a 2000 calendar is limited to leap years. Which are.... 2000, 2028, 2056, 2084.
The year 1968 was a leap year starting on Monday. As of 2010, the next three occasions in which you can use this calendar are 2024, 2052, and 2080.
The 19th to the 25th of November 1989 was the 47th calendar week of that year.
September 7, 1989 on the English calendar is 23 Bhadra 1396 on the Bengali calendar. This date falls on a Thursday.
The 2007 calendar is current in 2018. The next time it will be current again is in 2029.
On November 6, 1989, the Bengali calendar date was 21 Kartik 1396. This day fell on a Monday. The Bengali calendar is roughly a lunar calendar, which means its dates can differ from the Gregorian calendar.