Nonstandard time zones are time zones that differ from the standard whole-hour offsets from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). They often include fractional offsets, such as UTC+5:30 or UTC+3:45, which can arise from historical, political, or geographic reasons. Some regions may adopt nonstandard time zones to better align with local daylight hours or for economic considerations. Examples include India (UTC+5:30) and Nepal (UTC+5:45).
A LOT of places do; it's not just Asia.
Cairo, Egypt operates on Eastern European Time (EET), which is UTC+2. However, it observes Daylight Saving Time (DST), shifting to Eastern European Summer Time (EEST) at UTC+3 during the summer months. While this is not considered a nonstandard time zone, the DST practice can lead to confusion regarding timekeeping. Overall, Cairo's time zone is standard in relation to global time zones, but the DST changes make it unique in its application.
The boy was a nonstandard student.
we were using the nonstandard set of measurements
Divided the United States into time zones
If you mean time zones. There is one. Russia has 7 time zones.
there are 24 time zones
The Uttermost Co. Time Zones clock can handle up to eight time zones concurrently.
40 time zones in the world.
there is 24 standard time zones!
There are 24 time zones.
Time Zones?