Yes, "every two days" is synonymous with "QOD," which stands for "quaque altera die" in Latin, meaning "every other day." Both terms indicate an alternate day schedule, occurring on day one, then skipping day two, and resuming on day three. Therefore, they represent the same frequency of occurrence.
10 dollars doubled for every two days for a month
80
I can only see one 'days' in 'two days'. Not really much Maths there. If you want to look at this problem the other way...there are only two (approximately 24-hour) days in the span of two days, assuming that you stay in the same time zone for the 48-hour period.
Seventy-two hours is the same as 3 days.
Twice a week means two days a week. Example: Monday and Wednesday, or, Tuesday and Friday. Once in two weeks means once every fourteen days.
every two days every two days
90 days
10 dollars doubled for every two days for a month
The medical abbreviation for every four hours is q4h.q4h
Ryan's steakhouse frys it fish and chicken in the same grease but the grease is changed every two days to prevent it from becoming fishy
every two days
Every day or every two days.
It would really depend how often you have two days of unhealthy eating, e.g if for a week you eat unhealthy for two out of seven days every single week, then yes It could. but if say you eat unhealthily for two days of every one - two months then the damage would be minimal if evident at all.
The reason for this is because the number of weekdays more than an even number of weeks in a month is 7, therefore, the same number of days as the number of days in a week are gained. To clarify: April = 30 days. Two extra days are gained. May = 31 days. Three extra days are gained. June = 30 days. Two extra days are gained. Because this is a total of seven days, a whole extra week has passed in the year aside from an even four weeks to the month.
Every 30 days !
-- One every 29.53 days. -- One or two in every calendar month, but once in a great while none in February. -- 12 or 13 in every calendar year. -- On the average over a long time, the same number on every day of the week.
Yes, those phrases mean the same thing.