Right on ! One year equals 12 (twelve) months !
No, since the statement is incomplete.
Divide the number of seconds by 86400 to convert to days. Then, divide the result by 30 to convert to months. The number of days per month is not very clearly defined; it really depends what month or months you are talking about, so you have to use an average, such as 30, or 30.5.
Variables can be correlational but not causal when they show a statistical relationship without one directly influencing the other. This can occur due to confounding factors that affect both variables or due to coincidence in data patterns. For example, ice cream sales and drowning incidents may correlate during summer months, but neither causes the other; both are influenced by the warmer weather. Thus, correlation does not imply causation without further evidence.
The answer depends on how you define a 6-month period. A six month period defined in terms of the same date in months are are 6 months apart is 181, 182, 183 or 184 days - depending on when you start counting. Half a calendar year is either 182 days and 12 hours, or 183 days (in a leap year).
Eighteen months of data are available for the cardholder account statement viewing.
Eighteen months of data are available for the cardholder account statement viewing.
Right on ! One year equals 12 (twelve) months !
eighteen
one
Eighteen months of data are available for the cardholder account statement viewing.
It will not appear on any statement until it is no longer outstanding. After all, until it is presented to the bank, they have no way of knowing if you wrote the check to someone or tore it up. You have to consider it as an outstanding check when you reconcile your statement EVERY month until it appears on a statement.
What do you mean "actual answer not 12". There ARE 12 months in a year as months and years are defined in the context of the earth's orbit around the sun.
Eighteen months of data are available for the cardholder account statement viewing.
show profitd
No, since the statement is incomplete.
recession