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  3. Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Language/2015 September 7

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reference_desk/...

    The time period within 90 days of today (September 7, 2015) is a 180-day time period. It starts on June 7, 2015, and it ends on December 7, 2015. Again, if the concept is verbalized as of this moment right now, then the first half of that time spread is moot and not under consideration. But, literally, it is within the 90 day time frame (which ...

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  5. Countdown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Countdown

    In the context of a rocket launch, the "L minus Time" is the physical time before launch, e.g. "L minus 3 minutes and 40 seconds". "T minus Time" is a system to mark points at which actions necessary for the launch are planned - this time stops and starts as various hold points are entered, and so doesn't show the actual time to launch.

  6. Sequential time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequential_time

    Palindromic times can also be observed, e.g. 10:02:10 on 11/01/2001 (two minutes and ten seconds after 10 am on 11 January 2001 in parts of the world using month/day format) was the first fully palindromic time sequence of the twenty-first century. The last palindromic time sequence was at 02:02:10 at 11/01/2020 (two minutes and twenty-one ...

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  8. Doomsday rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doomsday_rule

    Extending this to get the anchor day, the procedure is often described as accumulating a running total T in six steps, as follows: Let T be the year's last two digits. If T is odd, add 11. Now let T = ⁠ T / 2 ⁠. If T is odd, add 11. Now let T = 7 − (T mod 7). Count forward T days from the century's anchor day to get the year's anchor day.

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