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A calendar year begins on the New Year's Day of the given calendar system and ends on the day before the following New Year's Day, and thus consists of a whole number of days.

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37-501: Q4 , Q-4 or q4 may refer to: The fourth quarter of a calendar year The fourth quarter of a fiscal year Q4 (New York City bus) , a bus line in Queens Quake 4 , a first-person shooter video game developed by Raven Software Audi Q4 e-tron , a compact SUV Swazi Express Airways IATA airline designator Alfa Romeos All Wheel Drive (AWD) system LNER Class Q4 ,

74-606: A Metonic calendar based year will drift against the seasons by about one day every 2 centuries. Metonic calendars include the calendar used in the Antikythera Mechanism about 21 centuries ago, and the Hebrew calendar . Alternatively in a pure lunar calendar , years are defined as having always 12 lunations, so a year is 354 or 355 days long: the Islamic calendar is the prime example. Consequently, an Islamic year

111-573: A 53rd week which is usually appended to the last quarter. It is then 98 days instead of 91 days long, which complicates comparisons. In the Chinese calendar , the quarters are traditionally associated with the 4 seasons of the year: Month A month is a unit of time , used with calendars , that is approximately as long as a natural phase cycle of the Moon ; the words month and Moon are cognates . The traditional concept of months arose with

148-467: A class of British steam locomotives The Cunard Line codename for the ship later named Queen Elizabeth 2 A shortened name for Section 4, a part of Co-op City An abbreviation for " quaque four" (every four) used in medical prescriptions " Quran 4 ", the 4th chapter of the Islamic Holy book See also [ edit ] 4Q (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by

185-501: A length of 365 days in an ordinary year , with 8760 hours, 525,600 minutes, or 31,536,000 seconds; but 366 days in a leap year , with 8784 hours, 527,040 minutes, or 31,622,400 seconds. With 97 leap years every 400 years, the year has an average length of 365.2425 days. Other formula-based calendars can have lengths which are further out of step with the solar cycle: for example, the Julian calendar has an average length of 365.25 days, and

222-491: Is a common way of teaching the lengths of the months in the English-speaking world. The knuckles of the four fingers of one's hand and the spaces between them can be used to remember the lengths of the months. By making a fist, each month will be listed as one proceeds across the hand. All months landing on a knuckle are 31 days long and those landing between them are 30 days long, with variable February being

259-576: Is about 11 days shorter than a solar year and cycles through the seasons in about 33 solar = 34 lunar years: the Islamic New Year has a different Gregorian calendar date in each (solar) year. Purely solar calendars often have months which no longer relate to the phase of the Moon, but are based only on the motion of the Sun relative to the equinoxes and solstices, or are purely conventional like in

296-802: Is added), but the calendar follows the rules of the Gregorian calendar to determine leap years and add a lead day to one month, so the Khmer lunar year may have a total of 354, 355, 384 or 385 days. The Tongan calendar is based on the cycles of the Moon around the Earth in one year. The months are: Pingelapese , a language from Micronesia , also uses a lunar calendar. There are 12 months associated with their calendar. The Moon first appears in March, they name this month Kahlek . This system has been used for hundreds of years and throughout many generations. This calendar

333-718: Is an extra month in the Hindu calendar that is inserted to keep the lunar and solar calendars aligned. "Purushottam" is an epithet of Vishnu , to whom the month is dedicated. The names in the solar calendar are just the names of the zodiac sign in which the sun travels. They are The Baháʼí calendar is the calendar used by the Baháʼí Faith . It is a solar calendar with regular years of 365 days, and leap years of 366 days. Years are composed of 19 months of 19 days each (361 days), plus an extra period of " Intercalary Days " (4 in regular and 5 in leap years). The months are named after

370-438: Is calculated to a precision of within 24 hours of the lunar phase, achieved by a particular arrangement of months, and the month of EQUOS having a variable length of 29 or 30 days to adjust for any lunar slippage. This setup means the calendar could stay precisely aligned to its lunar phase indefinitely. The lunar month is divided into two halves, the first of 15 days and the second of 14 or 15 days. The month

407-413: Is calculated to start at the first quarter moon, with the full moon at the centre of the first half-month and the dark moon at the centre of the second half-month. The calendar does not rely on unreliable visual sightings. An intercalary lunar month is inserted before every 30 lunar months to keep in sync with the solar year. Every 276 years this adds one day to the solar point, so if for example

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444-610: Is cyclical and relies on the position and shape of the Moon. The Sinhalese calendar is the Buddhist calendar in Sri Lanka with Sinhala names. Each full moon Poya day marks the start of a Buddhist lunar month. The first month is Bak. The old Icelandic calendar is not in official use anymore, but some Icelandic holidays and annual feasts are still calculated from it. It has 12 months, broken down into two groups of six often termed "winter months" and "summer months". The calendar

481-409: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Calendar year To reconcile the calendar year with the astronomical cycle (which has a fractional number of days) certain years contain extra days ("leap days" or "intercalary days"). The Gregorian year, which is in use in most of the world, begins on January 1 and ends on December 31. It has

518-416: Is peculiar in that the months always start on the same weekday rather than on the same date . Hence Þorri always starts on a Friday sometime between January 22 and January 28 ( Old style : January 9 to January 15) , Góa always starts on a Sunday between February 21 and February 27 ( Old style : February 8 to February 14) . *NOTE: New Year in ancient Georgia started from September. Like

555-424: The Hebrew calendar has an average length of 365.2468 days. The Lunar Hijri calendar is a lunar calendar consisting of 12 months in a year of 354 or 355 days. The astronomer's mean tropical year , which is averaged over equinoxes and solstices, is currently 365.24219 days, slightly shorter than the average length of the year in most calendars. A year can also be measured by starting on any other named day of

592-576: The Julian , Augustan , and Gregorian ; all had the same number of days in their months. Despite other attempts, the names of the months after the Augustan calendar reform have persisted, and the number of days in each month (except February) have remained constant since before the Julian reform . The Gregorian calendar , like the Roman calendars before it, has twelve months, whose Anglicized names are: The famous mnemonic Thirty days hath September

629-422: The ides . Their system is somewhat intricate. The ides occur on the thirteenth day in eight of the months, but in March, May, July, and October, they occur on the fifteenth. The nones always occur 8 days (one Roman 'week') before the ides, i.e., on the fifth or the seventh. The calends are always the first day of the month, and before Julius Caesar's reform fell sixteen days (two Roman weeks) after

666-455: The solar (or 'tropical') year , which makes accurate, rule-based lunisolar calendars that combine the two cycles complicated. The most common solution to this problem is the Metonic cycle , which takes advantage of the fact that 235 lunations are approximately 19 tropical years (which add up to not quite 6,940 days): 12 years have 12 lunar months, and 7 years are 13 lunar months long. However,

703-484: The Hindu calendar, the Khmer calendar consists of both a lunar calendar and a solar calendar. The solar is used more commonly than the lunar calendar. The Khmer lunar calendar most often contains 12 months; however, the eighth month is repeated (as a "leap month") every two or three years, making 13 months instead of 12. Each lunar month has 29 or 30 days. The year normally has then 354 or 384 days (when an intercalary month

740-519: The Islamic calendar. They are named as follows: See Islamic calendar for more information on the Islamic calendar. The Hindu calendar has various systems of naming the months. The months in the lunar calendar are: These are also the names used in the Indian national calendar for the newly redefined months. Purushottam Maas or Adhik Maas ( translit. adhika = 'extra', māsa = 'month')

777-630: The Jewish Karaites still rely on actual moon observations, reliance on astronomical calculations and tabular methods is increasingly common in practice. There are 12 months and an additional leap year month in the Ahom sexagenary calendar known as Lak-ni. The first month is Duin Shing. The Roman calendar was reformed several times, the last three enduring reforms during historical times. The last three reformed Roman calendars are called

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814-522: The Latin numerals 7–10 ( septem , octo , novem , and decem ) because they were originally the seventh through tenth months in the Roman calendar. In the modern Gregorian calendar, the only month with a variable number of days is the second month, February, which has 29 days during a leap year and 28 days otherwise. The following types of months are mainly of significance in astronomy. Most of them (but not

851-438: The Moon returns to the same node slightly earlier than it returns to the same star. At the simplest level, most well-known lunar calendars are based on the initial approximation that 2 lunations last 59 solar days : a 30-day full month followed by a 29-day hollow month — but this is only roughly accurate and regularly needs intercalation (correction) by a leap day . Additionally, the synodic month does not fit easily into

888-427: The Moon; the new moon marking the end of an old month and start of a new month; the full moon occurring in the middle of the month, after which the whole month took its name. When an intercalary month was needed, a third Litha month was inserted in mid-summer. The Coligny calendar (Gaulish/Celtic) is an Iron Age Metonic lunisolar calendar, with 12 lunar months of either 29 or 30 days. The lunar month

925-577: The Old Norse calendar, the Anglo-Saxons had their own calendar before they were Christianized which reflected native traditions and deities. These months were attested by Bede in his works On Chronology and The Reckoning of Time written in the 8th century. His Old English month names are probably written as pronounced in Bede's native Northumbrian dialect . The months were named after

962-449: The Sun. An anomalistic month is longer than a sidereal month because the perigee moves in the same direction as the Moon is orbiting the Earth, one revolution in nine years. Therefore, the Moon takes a little longer to return to perigee than to return to the same star. A draconic month is shorter than a sidereal month because the nodes move in the opposite direction as the Moon is orbiting the Earth, one revolution in 18.6 years. Therefore,

999-611: The attributes of God. Days of the year begin and end at sundown. The Iranian / Persian calendar , currently used in Iran , also has 12 months. The Persian names are included in the parentheses. It begins on the northern Spring equinox. The Bengali calendar , used in Bangladesh , follows solar months and it has six seasons. The months and seasons in the calendar are: The months in the Nanakshahi calendar are: Different from

1036-405: The basis of many calendars today and are used to divide the year . Calendars that developed from the Roman calendar system, such as the internationally used Gregorian calendar , divide the year into 12 months, each of which lasts between 28 and 31 days. The names of the months were Anglicized from various Latin names and events important to Rome, except for the months 9–12, which are named after

1073-602: The calendar, and ending on the day before this named day in the following year. This may be termed a "year's time", but is not a "calendar year". The calendar year can be divided into four quarters, often abbreviated as Q1, Q2, Q3, and Q4. Since they are three months each, they are also called trimesters . In the Gregorian calendar : In some domains, weeks are preferred over months for scheduling and reporting, so they use quarters of exactly 13 weeks each, often following ISO week date conventions. One in five to six years has

1110-535: The cycle of Moon phases ; such lunar months ("lunations") are synodic months and last approximately 29.53 days , making for roughly 12.37 such months in one Earth year. From excavated tally sticks , researchers have deduced that people counted days in relation to the Moon's phases as early as the Paleolithic age. Synodic months, based on the Moon's orbital period with respect to the Earth–Sun line, are still

1147-606: The distinction between sidereal and tropical months) were first recognized in Babylonian lunar astronomy . A synodic month is longer than a sidereal month because the Earth-Moon system is orbiting the Sun in the same direction as the Moon is orbiting the Earth. The Sun moves eastward with respect to the stars (as does the Moon) and it takes about 2.2 days longer for the Moon to return to the same apparent position with respect to

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1184-401: The ides (except the ides of February and the intercalary month). Within a month, the following dates fall on the same day of the week: Some months have the same date/weekday structure. In a non-leap year: In a leap year: The Hebrew calendar has 12 or 13 months. Adar 1 is only added 7 times in 19 years. In ordinary years, Adar 2 is simply called Adar. There are also twelve months in

1221-403: The motion of the Moon in its orbit is very complicated and its period is not constant. The date and time of this actual observation depends on the exact geographical longitude as well as latitude, atmospheric conditions, the visual acuity of the observers, etc. Therefore, the beginning and lengths of months defined by observation cannot be accurately predicted. While some like orthodox Islam and

1258-403: The note F corresponds to February , the exceptional 28–29 day month, and so on. The mean month-length in the Gregorian calendar is 30.436875 days. Any five consecutive months, that do not include February, contain 153 days. Months in the pre-Julian Roman calendar included: The Romans divided their months into three parts, which they called the calends , the nones , and

1295-511: The remembered exception. When the knuckle of the index finger is reached (July), go over to the first knuckle on the other fist, held next to the first (or go back to the first knuckle) and continue with August. This physical mnemonic has been taught to primary school students for many decades, if not centuries. This cyclical pattern of month lengths matches the musical keyboard alternation of wide white keys (31 days) and narrow black keys (30 days). The note F corresponds to January ,

1332-447: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Q4&oldid=1133776615 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

1369-532: The widely used Gregorian calendar . The complexity required in an accurate lunisolar calendar may explain why solar calendars have generally replaced lunisolar and lunar calendars for civil use in most societies. The Hellenic calendars , the Hebrew Lunisolar calendar and the Islamic Lunar calendar started the month with the first appearance of the thin crescent of the new moon . However,

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