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years

A year is a unit of time used to measure long intervals and organize civil, agricultural, and astronomical activities. The most common reference is the tropical year, the time for the Sun to return to the same position in the cycle of the seasons, averaging about 365.2422 days. Other astronomical year definitions include the sidereal year (Earth’s orbital return relative to the fixed stars) about 365.25636 days and the anomalistic year about 365.2596 days.

In civil use, a calendar year runs from January 1 to December 31, usually 365 days in

Calendars based on lunar or lunisolar cycles diverge more from the tropical year. A lunar year, comprising

Year numbering is a convention for chronology and can be expressed as BCE/CE or BC/AD; astronomical year

a
common
year
and
366
in
a
leap
year.
The
Gregorian
calendar,
introduced
in
1582,
uses
a
400-year
cycle
with
leap
years
on
years
divisible
by
4,
except
that
century
years
not
divisible
by
400
are
common
years.
This
yields
an
average
year
length
of
365.2425
days.
12
lunar
months,
is
about
354
days.
Lunisolar
calendars
add
leap
months
to
stay
in
sync
with
the
solar
cycle,
maintaining
roughly
a
12-month
year
over
longer
cycles.
Fiscal
years,
academic
years,
and
other
legal
or
administrative
years
are
common
uses
of
the
term,
often
not
tied
to
the
astronomical
year.
numbering
includes
a
year
zero.
In
everyday
use,
a
year
denotes
a
single
calendar
slice
within
a
longer
era,
providing
a
frame
for
events,
data,
and
records.