Common year
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A common year is a calendar year with 365 days, as distinguished from a leap year, which has 366 days.[1] More generally, a common year is one without intercalation. The Gregorian calendar, used by the majority of the world, employs both common years and leap years. This is to keep the calendar aligned with the tropical year, which does not contain an exact number of days. A common year is approximately a quarter day (six hours) shorter than a tropical year, which has 365.24 days.[2] If the Gregorian calendar only used common years and omitted leap years, the calendar would be out of sync with the tropical year by approximately 24 days in 100 years.[3]
In the Gregorian calendar, 303 out of every 400 years are common years. Leap years are any years that are divisible by 4, unless it can also be divided by 100, in which case it is a common year. This is unless the year is divisible by 400, in which case it is a leap year. The extra common years are added to account for the fact that common years are 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds shorter than a tropical year, rather than six hours exactly.[3] By comparison, in the Julian calendar, 300 out of every 400 years are common years, with every fourth year being a leap year without exception.
The common year has 52 weeks and one day, hence a common year always begins and ends on the same day of the week (for example, January 1 and December 31 both fall on a Thursday in 2026) and the year following a common year will start on the subsequent day of the week. As a result, if the following year is a common year as well, each date will advance by one day of the week. For example, March 1, 2025, fell on a Saturday, then it falls on a Sunday in 2026 and Monday in 2027. If the following year is a leap year, then dates from January 1 to February 28 will still advance by one day, but all subsequent dates will advance by two days (for example, March 1 falls on a Monday in 2027 and Wednesday in 2028), due to the additional day.[4]
Calendars
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Year | Calendar, Astronomy & Timekeeping | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved January 27, 2025.
- ^ "Leap Day on February 29". www.timeanddate.com. Retrieved January 27, 2025.
- ^ a b Abbany, Zulficar (February 28, 2020). "No perfect calendar: Why we have leap years". dw.com. Retrieved April 8, 2025.
- ^ Lardner, Dionysius (1855). The Museum of Science and Art. Walton and Maberly. p. 23.
Common year
View on GrokipediaFundamentals
Definition
A common year, also known as an ordinary year, in the Gregorian calendar consists of 365 days. This duration equates to exactly 52 weeks and 1 day, as 365 divided by 7 yields 52 full weeks (364 days) with one additional day that advances the weekly cycle.[6] The Gregorian calendar uses common years to approximate the tropical year, the time required for Earth to complete one orbit around the Sun relative to the vernal equinox, which measures approximately 365.2422 days.[7] In common years, no extra day is added, unlike leap years, which insert February 29 to better align the calendar with this solar period.[8] Common years are structured into 12 months with the following fixed day counts: 31 days each in January, March, May, July, August, October, and December; 30 days each in April, June, September, and November; and 28 days in February. This distribution totals 365 days and maintains a consistent annual framework across non-leap periods in the calendar.[7]Distinction from Leap Year
A common year comprises 365 days, in contrast to a leap year, which has 366 days due to the insertion of an intercalary day designated as February 29.[8] This extra day causes the calendar in a leap year to advance by two weekdays over the year, whereas a common year advances by only one weekday.[7] The distinction serves to synchronize the calendar with Earth's orbital period around the Sun, preventing seasonal misalignment. The tropical year—the interval between successive vernal equinoxes—measures approximately 365.2422 days.[7] Each common year thus produces a cumulative drift of roughly 0.2422 days relative to the seasons, which leap years mitigate by adding the extra day roughly every four years.[7] Over a four-year period with three common years and one leap year, the total duration is 1,461 days, equivalent to 208 weeks and 5 days.[7] This configuration yields an average year length of 365.25 days, approximating the tropical year and thereby maintaining long-term calendar-orbital alignment.[7]Gregorian Calendar
Identification Rules
In the Gregorian calendar, a year is classified as a common year if it does not satisfy the criteria for a leap year, resulting in 365 days rather than 366.[2] The primary rule states that a year is a common year if it is not evenly divisible by 4, or if it is divisible by 100 but not by 400.[9] This ensures alignment with the solar year's approximate length of 365.2425 days by occasionally omitting the extra day added in February for leap years.[10] The algorithmic determination of a common year can be expressed through the inverse of the leap year condition: a year is common if it fails the leap year test, which is defined as follows—check if (year modulo 4 equals 0) and (either year modulo 100 does not equal 0, or year modulo 400 equals 0); if this condition is false, the year is common.[2] In pseudocode form:if (year % 4 != 0) || (year % 100 == 0 && year % 400 != 0) {
return "common year";
} else {
return "leap year";
}
This logic prioritizes the basic divisibility by 4 for most years while applying exceptions for century years to correct for accumulated errors in earlier Julian calendar practices.[9]
Century years illustrate key edge cases in this rule. For instance, years such as 1700, 1800, and 1900 are common years despite being divisible by 4, because they are divisible by 100 but not by 400, thus skipping the leap day.[10] In contrast, 1600 and 2000 qualify as leap years since they are divisible by 400, overriding the century exception.[2] These adjustments prevent the calendar from drifting relative to the seasons over centuries.[9]