The 5th of June 2013 was a Wednesday and the 19th of December was a Thursday. Starting on Thursday the 6th of June until Thursday the 19th of December, there are 29 Thursdays.
June 4 2012 is already gone. You do not specify which year. And, the answer will depend on when it is written.
In the northern hemisphere, daylight hours start getting longer after the Winter Solstice, December 21. The daylight continues to legthen everydy until Summer Solstice, June 21. Then the reverse happens. The daylight gradually reduces until Winter Solstice arrives again.
-- They only get longer between December 21 and June 21. For the other half of the year, they get shorter. -- Just after December 21 and just before June 21, they get longer very slowly ... only a small difference between one day and the next. -- Around March 21, they get longer fast ... many minutes' difference between one day and the next. EDIT: The length of the day differs by 4 minutes each day throughout the year.
There are 5 months between June and December. July, August, September, October and November.
The amount of daylight gained between December 21 and December 22 is measured in seconds. By the first week in January, it may be as much as a minute. From February 1 to February 2, 2 minutes, and by March 21, 4 minutes per day. Then it begins to decrease until June 21, when the difference goes back to zero.
From December 21 to June 21, the days gradually lengthen, resulting in a gain of approximately 5 to 6 minutes of daylight per day. Over this period of about six months, this totals roughly 180 minutes or 3 hours of additional daylight by June 21. The exact increase may vary slightly depending on your geographic location.
The number of seconds or minutes gained per day is different for every date, and for every latitude. It runs in a sinusoidal curve; starting from a trough on December 21, the day length begins to CREEP up slowly, day by day, a few seconds, then many seconds, then an additional minute each day. By March 21, the equinox, the Alberta BC days are getting rapidly longer; 4 minutes each day! Then the pace of increase slows, until mid June when the days are getting only seconds longer each day until June 21, when the cycle peaks and begins to fall.
At 41 degrees north latitude, you gain some length of daylight every day from December 21 until June 21, and you lose some length of daylight every day from June 21 until December 21. The number of minutes difference from one day to the next also changes. It's greatest on March 21 and on September 21, and when you get to June 21 or December 21, it's almost nothing.
After December 21st, the winter solstice, Nevada typically gains about 2 minutes of daylight each day. This increase continues until the summer solstice in June, when the days are longest. The exact amount of daylight gained can vary slightly depending on the specific location within Nevada.
We have spring from march to June, summer from June until september, autumn from September to December, and winter from December until march.
As of December, there are 6 months until June.
As of December, there are 6 months until June.
That will vary in a sinusoidal pattern, but it depends on the date. From December 22 to December 23, you gain a few seconds of daylight. But it increases day by day, until on March 21 (the equinox) you're gaining 3 minutes per day. Then it starts to decrease, until from June 19 to June 20, it's only a few seconds more. After the Summer Solstice around June 21, the amount of sunlight each day begins to decrease, in the same pattern.
Spring: 21st March until 20th June Summer: 21st June until 20th September Fall: 21st September until 20th December Winter: 21st December until 20th March
Preference
From the 11th of December 2015, when the question was asked, it is 540 days until the 3rd of June 2017.