a leap year is february 29th and it appears every 4 years on the gregorian calendar. it exists to keep seasons where they are in relation to the year. because a year is 365.25 days wheras you can only have 365 days in a year, so to account for that .25 they add an extra day every four years.
The Romans
Leap years were first implemented in the Gregorian calendar in 1582.
No, odd-numbered years are never leap years in either the Gregorian calendar or the Julian calendar.
Here they are:180418081812181618201824182818321836184018441848185218561860186418681872187618801884188818921896
Julius Caesar introduced leap years when he reformed the Roman calendar in 46 BCE. His calendar, which is called the Julian calendar, was in use for almost 20 centuries. Beginning in 1582, it was eventually replaced by the Gregorian calendar, which is almost identical to the Julian calendar but is more accurate because it has fewer leap years.
Here they are:2000200420082012201620202024202820322036204020442048205220562060206420682072207620802084208820922096Here they are: 2000200420082012201620202024202820322036204020442048205220562060206420682072207620802084208820922096
2012 is a leap year. Leap years fall once every four years to keep our calendar years in sync with the seasons.
In the Gregorian calendar, No Only century years divisible by 400 are leap years.
every 4 years....2012 will be the next leap year.
The Julian calendar has more leap years. Every 400-year period of the Julian calendar is three days longer than the same period in the Gregorian calendar.
In 46 BC with the creation of the Julian calendar.
The 2000 calendar will repeat in 2028. This was a leap year and leap year calendars generally repeat every 28 years.