Noon and midnight are the two times that divide AM and PM. There is one "imaginary line" between 11:59am and 12:00pm (noon) and another between 11:59pm and 12:00am (midnight).
Yes. Pm is after 12 in the noon
The PM (Post-Meridiem) part of the day contains exactly half of the hours of the 24-hour day, so there are 12 hours in the PM.
Four time a day, each (eight in all).At 02:10:54.5 am and 02:10:54.5 pm, 02:43:38.2 am and 02:43:38.2 pm; and at 04:21:49.1 am and 04:21:49.1 pm, 04:54:32.7 am and 04:54:32.7 pm.
AM = ante meridiem (Latin for "before the middle of the day")PM = post meridiem (Latin for "after the middle of the day")
Midnight... 12:00 Am Noon... 12:00 Pm
international dateline
international dateline
The line dividing the day into AM and PM is called the meridian or the 12-hour mark. It typically falls at 12:00 noon, marking the transition from the morning (AM) to the afternoon (PM).
12.15 pm is just after mid day.
23 hours after 8 pm would be 7 pm the following day. This is because there are 24 hours in a day, so subtracting 23 hours from 8 pm leaves 9 pm on the same day, and then subtracting another hour gives you 7 pm the next day.
24 hours prior to 8 pm would be 8 pm the previous day.
This contributor, frankly, has not heard that phrase. But it does make sense . . . At the instant of time when the calendar date is the same everywhere on earth, the time is Midnight on the 180° meridian (roughly the International Date Line). At that instant, all the longitudes west of Greenwich are in AM time, all east longitudes are in PM time, and it's 12:00 noon ... mid-day ... on the Prime Meridian.
Yes. Pm is after 12 in the noon
It is either. When you are asleep, that is am, during the day it is pm
Am - ante meridiem (Latin for before midday) Pm - post meridiem (Latin for after midday)
There are 16 hours from 9 PM to 1 PM the next day.
There are 16 hours from 9 PM to 1 PM the next day.