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Every three months is called a quarter. And there are four quarters in a year.
Trimerterly
quarter
Anywhere from seconds (overdose) to minutes (shot while stealing to support habit) to hours (killed on street by robber while nodding) to days (dead from malnutrition) to weeks (organ failure) to months (all of the above) to years (declining overall health from use) to who knows?
Yes. It occurs every year in Antarctica. Antarctica experiences months of continuous daylight, and then months of continuous night.
impossible. the said phenomenon only occurs in north and south POLE.
dont know ask freind
The flow of water is continuous
Six months of continuous cohabitation.
Not all of it -- only a tiny region near the South Pole experiences 6 months of continuous daylight followed by nearly 6 months of continuous night. The North Pole has a similar division between day and night, each lasting one half of the year. However, practically all of Antarctica experiences at least 24 hours of continuous day or night, and weeks or months of continuous day or night occur in various locations. *Because of the width of the solar disc, and refraction by the atmosphere, there are about 2 or 3 more days of daylight per year than there are of night.
Sweden is the country having six months day and six months night because it is located in the north pole. However I think that Antarctica is also having long days and long nights because it is in south pole.
I read, in 18 months of production, 2,000 worldwide, 700 US.
The Antarctic continent experiences days, weeks or months of no sunrises, depending on where you are on the continent.
No. This only occurs at the poles. Northern Norway (Svalbard) has 5 months of continuous daylight from mid-April to September and 5 months continuous night from late October to March.
because the earth is tilted towards the poles,so in summers the north pole will have continuous daylight for 6 months and south pole will have night for 6 months.Then in winters it will be reversed i.e. north pole will have night for the other 6 months and south pole will have continuous day light for 6 months. this proves that the poles experience day for 6 months and other 6 months they experience night.
The longest recorded case of continuous hiccups lasted for 68 years, in the case of Charles Osborne from 1922 to 1990.