Knowledge (XXG)

User talk:Joe Kress

Source 📝

1695:. You'll need the Sunday Letter for the year, which is easy to find. The table gives the Sunday Letters of every centennial year from 1600 to 2400 - it can be extended because every 900 years the Sunday Letter cycles forwards two places (e.g. B becomes D and GF becomes BA). A leap year has two letters - one for January and February and the other for March to December. As Easter falls in March or April, reference in this explanation to the Sunday Letter of a leap year is a reference to the second letter. Every year the Sunday Letter cycles back one place (two if the second year is a leap year). Also, every eleven years the Sunday Letter repeats, provided that the first year of the eleven is not exactly divisible by four. The entire sequence repeats every 28 years. If a centennial year falls within any of these periods these alignments may break down, so use them only if the intervening centennial year is a leap year. If you want to start your eleven - year period from a year which is exactly divisible by four, work out the Sunday Letter for the preceding or following year and apply the eleven - year rule from there. 2323:
calendar.png“ und damit auch die Tabelle „Difference between Gregorian and Julian calendar dates“ im Originalartikel in englischer Sprache („Gregorian calendar“). Sie, Mister Joe, haben jedoch am 22.Februar 2010 die richtige Datei in den Originalartikel hinein gegeben und damit Übereinstimmung herbei geführt. Danke dafür. Nun kann die „File: Permanent calendar.png“ wieder in den Artikel hinein ! Wie denken Sie darüber ? LenderCarl (es folgt die google-Übersetzung) Dear Mr. Kress, your forgiveness for my long silence, it has private reasons. On Jan 17, 2010, the remote IP 62.31.226.77 the file "Gregorian calendar" because of an alleged error in the file. It relates to the conversion notice in my file File: Permanent calendar.png "and therefore the table" Difference between Gregorian and Julian calendar dates "in the original article in English (" Gregorian calendar "). You, Mister Joe, but they have the correct file on 22 Feb 2010 added to the original article into and brought out to ensure consistency. Thank you for that. Now the "File: Permanent calendar.png" into it again in the article! How do you think? --
734:
active sections. I easily find edits anywhere within articles or talk pages by clicking on "hist" to the right of any articles or talk pages on my watchlist and then "compare selected revisions" since the last time I checked the page. This allows me to find multiple edits by editors (including vandals) anywhere on the page. A watchlist only indicates the last section edited by the last editor of any article or talk page, so that is useless for finding multiple edits. Clicking on the names of articles or talk pages on my watch list and then clicking on its history is indirect. Furthermore, clicking on the individual time/date of edits within an article's history is much too slow for me. Nevertheless, I'll try to use section editing on at least talk pages for those that don't use my technique. —
5110:), which I have. He states (p. 52) "This denial to Nicaea of any Paschal rule may have gone too far." Concluding, "It is therefore fair to say that the Council 'apparently' or 'implicitly' endorsed the rule of the equinox, even if it published no rule as such." Earlier (p. 51) he states that Constantine said that the council's "prohibition against keeping Passover 'with the Jews' was interpreted in ancient times as directed specifically against Quartodecimanism and as precluding the observation of Easter on the 14th day of the moon, even if that day was a Sunday." Thus Mosshammer attributes Hefele's rules to the Council, in some fashion. I do not have access to Nothaft (2018) ( 1031:, Shilova (2007) and Malevsky-Malevitch (1933) disagree on whether International Worker's Day and the Day of the Proletarian Revolution was one or two days from 1917 to 1929. Of course, both may have been celebrated for two days but they may have had different kinds of celebrations on those days, which I also read was the case for the post-1929 21–22 January. My specific concern is whether one or both days were days of rest. Another possibility is that they were originally only one day of rest and were expanded to two days sometime between 1917 and 1929. Could you cast a deciding vote and provide an additonal reference? — 4260:
small section of the whole article, so its removal would not make the article more readable, but it would significantly detract from the article. In general, I am against splitting an article into many smaller articles. The four gates is primarily a method to easily determine the annual Hebrew calendar of a specific anno mundi year, that is, exactly how each day of its 12 or 13 months should be partitioned into several weekly rows, especially when printed or displayed. The postponements and the delay percentages are not critical to it and may be removed without undue damage to the section itself.
840:
used and easily recognizable, even if not official, name for the polity that existed at the time. The actual calendar decree referred to the "Russian Republic", because the state did not receive the RSFSR name until the summer of 1918. The USSR was still a long way off, and in the intervening years the Bolsheviks did in fact have a lot of discussion as to whether various ethnic republics should legally be an autonomous states within the RSFSR, or separate states of the same level as the RSFSR.
1061:(History of public holidays in Russia) and sources therein. It appears that May 2 and Nov 8 were indeed designated (national) public holidays only in 1928. But, as the write-up in that Russian article and the chart from it (see above) indicate, the full story is rather complicated, and I certainly won't have time and patience trying to write it up. The situation is complicated by the existence, until 1929, of up to 10 "special" holidays - additional public holidays (however, 5091:. Reading between the lines of his treatment, there was dispute in the 19th century about what exactly had been decided at Nicaea. Although more recent scholarship has looked in some detail at the matter, there are still disputes about what was decided at Nicaea. Just a heads up that I'll probably rewrite your addition once I have time to dig into Mosshammer (2008) and Nothaft (2018) to clarify what the bishops at Nicaea did and didn't decide. -- 3010:, you added the phrase "is an imaginary year that is between 1 BC and AD 1." In the Julian or Gregorian calendars as used by historians no year zero exists, imaginary or otherwise, but a year zero does exist when those calendars are used by astronomers. In the latter case it corresponds to the historical year 1 BC, with negative numbers before year 0 (not any years labeled "BC"), and positive numbers after year 0 (not any years labeled "AD"). — 1047: 412: 5298: 4126: 2084: 5655: 5456: 5227: 4857: 4564: 4488: 2839:), not the 1959 edition of the last. On the other hand, a new edition is published either because the previous edition is out-of-print, new information is added, or errors have been discovered. The last reason opens the possiblility that Liu might have changed his mind concerning how to handle the 2033–34 irregularity. I doubt this because Liu meticulously lists all errors (long vs short months) in the 3979: 3197:... we have a sidelight on what was involved in "the year of confusion" as it was called. According to Dion Cassius, the historian, there was a governor in Gaul who insisted that, in the lengthened year, two months' extra taxes should be paid! The extra months were called Undecimber and Duodecimber. Julius Caesar determined that never again should the calendar fall into a similar condition. 1347:. I understand that your perpetual calendar, or something quite similar, was published previously. That only reinforces your copyright. But you cannot retain a copyright for any image that you place on Wikimedia Commons. You must remove the copyright symbol "( C )" from the image or the entire image may be deleted. For your convenience I repeat this paragraph via Google translate: 1356:. Ich verstehe, dass Ihr ewiger Kalender, oder etwas ganz Ähnliches, die bisher veröffentlicht wurde. Das verstärkt nur Ihr Urheberrecht. Aber man kann nicht behalten ein Urheberrecht für jedes Bild, die Sie auf Wikimedia Commons. Sie müssen das Verlagsrecht-Symbol zu entfernen "( C )" aus dem Bild oder das gesamte Bild gelöscht werden können. Ich wiederhole dies mit 5315:. However, the image is currently not used in any articles on Knowledge (XXG). If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Knowledge (XXG) (see 478:(searched because I had trouble trying to decipher one of the equations in the JPL copy). It turns out there is a big difference in legibility. I occasionally noticed that the pdfs in the JPL online database seem to be scrambled as if passed through some kind of rather bad OCR process. This is another of them! I can't think how it could be accidental. 3830: 3760: 4635: 799: 4238:. However, although Bushwick and Poznanski are primarily English, they have some Hebrew as well, whereas Resnikoff is entirely English. English sources are highly recommended because then editors can check them for themselves — non-English sources are permitted only when the information they contain is not available in any English source (see 4254:) and have been there for many years, so no argument can arise on that point. Furthermore, I only refer to them in general terms in the Four gates section, not specifically. However I am in a quandary whether the calculation of the molad Tishrei of a specific anno mundi year belongs in the Four gates section or in the postponement section. 2867:(Journal of the Swiss Astronomical Society). It began in 1943, confirming its 1998 volume (Jahrgang) is 56. Furthermore, F. Richard Stephenson and Reny O. Montandon published "Conversion of the Chinese cyclical calendar into the Julian or Gregorian calendar and vice-versa" in the same journal: Jahrgang 56, Nr. 289, Dezember 1998, 11–15. 1273:. Some readers were searching for astronomical articles published in the 1950s which were avaiable online to US readers but not to European readers. This problem is not limited to astronomy books. I discovered that Google books had a very hard to find book on calculating the date of Easter while searching for something else, 860: 5017:
attracted periodically by other planets, notably Jupiter and Saturn, changing its tilt relative to the celestial sphere. This secular resonance produces a cyclical precession of 50.3017"/yr (25,765 yr), but with an amplitude of less than one tenth of lunisolar precession. It is composed of three orbital parameters,
4970:
I'm trying to find out about two periods which IIRC combine to give the circa 26ka precession figure. I seem to recall that there were two precessions acting in opposing senses, one with a period of about 21ka , the other longer ( 44ka ?). They apparently combine to give the observed result of ~26ka.
3541:
The half precessional cycle is indeed 13,000 years, but when Vega becomes the north star is a specific year not dependent per se on the cycle itself, just when the celestial north pole happens to pass Vega. That year is somewhat dependent on opinion, similar to when Polaris became the north star (the
1207:
You may be a victim of Google books selective geographic availability. Some books which Google uploads, even those in the public domain, are only available to United States users or may only be available to United Kingdom users, etc. I found two editions of volume 6 on my United States English Google
843:
It's quite true, as you said, that the Bolshevik decree applied (at least theoretically) to the entire territory of the post-1922 Soviet Union, as all of it was probably claimed by the then Russian Republic at the time (assuming they had time to think of such legal niceties). In practice things may
134:
The Earth's rotation in 24 hours exactly is organised around a formal proof of cause,effect with values in support and it cannot be disproved.The 'sidereal time' value represents a specific line of reasoning based on timekeeping averages originating with John Flamsteed who inverted the references for
4185:
to GA status. I got it there. Then a couple of high-falutin' Knowledge (XXG) types beat the article up, claiming too many classical sources, not enough academic sources, too much halachic detail of a sort not interesting to a Knowledge (XXG) reader, etc., etc. They killed it so badly that it's now a
3221:
Nice reference, thanks, I'll note it as an example. Personally, I think the '10-month' calendar results from confusing December as the last month of a January-based year with December as the 10th month of a March-based year in which the 11th and 12th months were January and February, not Undecimber
3030:
Hello, ich schrieb ihnen am 28.Januar 2011 und habe Sie darauf hin gewiesen, dass von Ihnen die Tabelle (in leicht geänderter Form) aus meiner Bild-Datei: „Permanent_calendar.png“ entnommen wurde! Ich erwarte von Ihnen das sofortige Anbringen des entsprechenden Copyright-Hinweises. Hello, I wrote to
2439:. If "The" is regarded as part of the name of a work by its author or is used outside Knowledge (XXG) with "The", then Knowledge (XXG)'s Manual of Style requires that it be capitalized mid-sentence. I don't know what RTM means, nor do I know what quotation marks have to do with this, unless they are 2298:
Many thanks for your careful reading of my edits to the latitude article. There are a great many shortcomings to the article as it stands and I shall shortly post a list of suggested changes on the discussion page. In the meantime you might like to look at a provisional rewrite of the first sections
1498:
In Clavius' theory, there is a solar correction (SOL) which postpones the date of the paschal full moon by one day in most centennial years. There is also a lunar correction (LUN) in 32 per cent of centennial years which advances the date of the paschal full moon by one day. This is averaged out
1234:
Thanks for the information. I didn't know about selective geographic availability, and it looks as if you're right. I tried all the links and parameters you suggested, with negative result. I'm in the UK. Maybe someone at Google checked the wrong box and accidentally switched off availability here.
1218:
I have found books written in Latin on the Russian Google books site that were not even listed on the English Google books site. I just checked the Russian site (hl=ru) and the same two 1898 editions are listed for "other editions" (Другие издания) of "astronomical papers prepared for the use of the
957:
Julian, not Gregorian. That is, the date of the celebration itself (14 May), the date the correspondent cabled the story (15 May), and the date the newspaper printed it (17 May). Yet the article also states that the celebrations were held during Holy Week, that is, the week before Easter Sunday (not
4259:
The Hebrew calendar article as a whole is already quite bloated, having been written by several editors over several years, so the same information appears in several places. If anyone has a lot of time on their hands, it would benefit from a thorough rewrite. This Four gates section is only a very
3508:
re:axial precession. At this point, with my mistake fixed (nice of that guy to point it out, but he could have been less of a dick about it) the issue now comes down to sources. The sources I'm using specify 13,000 for a half-precessional cycle and for Vega being the North Star. Your sources appear
3488:
Thanks for fixing the broken graphic. I did the edit yesterday to replace the deleted one with a new one, but for some reason it didn't "take". Wiki Commons also had some kind of problem with the deleted one - it refused to update it, which is why I had to replace it with a new one... maybe it's my
2896:. I've tried to preserve as much information as possible in the merge but there has been a significant amount of data loss due to my inability to locate proper sources. I want you to know that I'm still searching for good sources for the missing information and when I find them it is going back in. 2759:
tables, last published in 1910 using 18th-century methods with tables extended to 2108. Among these books, only the 1840–2050 book included the 2033–34 irregularity, so only it would have included the new rule. Its first edition was in 1959 according to Liu, implying that this rule was in existance
2465:
By the way, the standard way of signing comments on talk pages is to type four tildes (~~~~). Knowledge (XXG) then automatically replaces them with your user name (if you signed in under that name), talk page link, and the date and time. You can personalize your signature by clicking on Preferences
2401:
Thank you, Joe Kress, for your interest in adding clarity to The World Calendar page @ World Calendar. It could help if I understood ’rv’ and the meaning/relevance of (rv - date is more important than weekday) but so far I need to question whether your 01:36, 21 March 2011 entry improves Line 41.
1714:
The calendar cards are printed both sides to cover all possible day/date variations in ordinary and leap years. March, April, July and December have cards to themselves. A year is normally a leap year if its last two digits divide exactly by four. If the last two figures are 00, then the year
1471:
As Gregory says, the object of the reform is to prevent the vernal equinox receding towards the winter months - i.e. to make the calendar year approximate to the length of the mean tropical year. He didn't make a very good job of it - the equinox still recedes although at a much slower rate - one
839:
The calendar article of course if not a place for discussing unrelated history detail, but my view, as that of a person who's read some literature on the period, using the term "Sovier Union" to refer to anything that took place in 1918 sounds very anachronistic, while "Soviet Russia" is a commonly
733:
via links" checked in my preferences, I almost never use it. I always click on the "edit this page" tab, rather than a section of the page. I've used this method since before section editing was even allowed in Knowledge (XXG). Indeed, just finding the section is difficult on talk pages with long
519:
on their talk page saying what I'd done and from their reply I'm far from certain that they meant to duplicate the reference and instead it was just some weird error. Therefore unless you can confirm that the book is a good reference for that paragrah I don't think it should be included - at least
138:
There is nothing worse than the 'fact' of the Earth rotating in the 'sidereal time' or rather,it exists on the same conceptual level as a flat Earth.The matter,which arises from Flamsteed ill-considered conclusion in the late 17th century by correlating the return of a star directly with planetary
2658:
I have been trying to find the modern origin of the 11th-month rule for the Chinese calendar. I have an article written by Liu Baolin which gives the rule, but it does not say where the rule came from. At one point in the discussion page of the Chinese calendar you wrote: "Nevertheless, the modern
2161:
Joe Kress, that was precisely my point, there were a number of people between India and Mongolia that were dropped by limiting the eastern extent to India. Maybe you can come up with a better phrasing to make it clear that various people between India and Mongolia keep informally using the Chinese
1706:
Now, in 2410 the vernal equinox falls on Saturday afternoon March 21 at 4.23 Greenwich Mean Time. The full moon falls on Sunday March 22 at 9.38 A.M. So a March 29 Easter would have been better, but at least the table puts Easter in the right month. Clavius fares abysmally - his Easter is on
1702:
The table tells us that the cypher for 2410 is 4, so we look for 4 in the prayer book table under Golden Number 17. It is marked against March 21, so in that year the paschal full moon falls on March 21. All Sundays are marked D in the second column, the next one is March 22, so that is Easter
1698:
For 2410 we see from the table that the Sunday Letter for 2400 is B and it's not a leap year. So the Sunday Letter for 2401 is A, for 2412 also A, for 2411 C and for 2410 D. We now need the Golden Number for 2410. The rule is, add one to the year and divide by nineteen - the remainder is the
1683:
The beauty of the new system is that the cypher increases by four every 900 years until 4199. It is the only arrangement of the 900 - year cycle which produces this result, and eliminates the defect of Clavius' theory in which the movement of the date of the paschal full moon sometimes goes into
539:
Hi again, it seem that once again you have reverted my edit. Generally exponentiation is written using superscripts. The only reason that the page name didn't have this superscript is because html tags can't be used for page names to give the exponentiation required; but the link name can use html
5137:
methods were in use by those churches and relied on the bishops of Rome and Alexandria to resolve any differences". After digging into Nothaft, I find that he has nothing to say about the question of Nicaea. He mainly talks about the later influence of Dionysius's false attribution of the 19-year
4726:
I'm pretty sure the English version you link to is an unacknowledged rip-off of a 2003 revision. I'm not positive about that, but it's certainly not an untouched 1658. Anyhow, thanks for trying. I figured the 1658 English wasn't online but it was worth the hail Mary pass of asking. Thanks again.
3159:
article. One point was to add sources for the various attempts to rename months by different emperors. The text included mention of an attempt to rename "November" as "Romanus", separate from Commodus' renaming of all the months of the year. Ploughing through the logs, I see you added this in
2743:
While discussing the 2033–34 irregularity, the first paper states the rule: "In these extraordinary cases, the rule for determining the intercalary month is as follows: The month containing the Winter Solstice must be the Eleventh month. If there are 13 months from one Eleventh month to the next
1711:
represented by ordinary type (for group A), italic type (for group B), and bold type (for group C). The accompanying text does not mention Orthodox Easter - the rule which I have added at the end is mine. The period of validity is not given but is as above. The instructions are as follows.
186:
Hi, I noticed that you prefer the article to be at 180th meridian as opposed to antimeridian, yet the edit summary says, "antimeridian depends on prime meridian". If this is the case, then would it not be better to name the article "antimeridian", since all the points on the antimeridian have an
1475:
That is why astronomers and Eastern European governments got together last century and introduced the new leap year rule, to reduce the rate of slippage to one day in 44,000 years. The observed equinox is a red herring - to keep it on March 21 eight leap days have to be intercalated every 33
1191:
Certainly the work is out of copyright, and some of the neighboring volumes in the series are visible on archive.org (and I don't have trouble with other books on google generally). I wonder if you know of any way, or could suggest any way, that I could get to see the downloaded pdf of Newcomb
2544:
Hi Joe, I noticed that you have moved the external link to the Umm al-Qura calendar at the bottom of the Islamic calendar page to one of the footnotes. For many people looking for a reliable Islamic date converter, such as the Umm al-Qura date converter, it will now be more difficult to find.
1710:
The combined Easter table below gives Catholic Easter for 1900 - 2199 (both dates inclusive) and Orthodox Easter for 1900 - 2099 (both dates inclusive). It is taken from the back of a calendar - in the actual table the Golden Numbers are bracketed into three groups, A, B, and C, which I have
1679:
The cypher is the combined effect of the two corrections. In 1582 there was a one - off advance in the date of the paschal full moon by four days, and a one - off removal of ten days from the calendar, giving a net retardation of six days. If, therefore, the cypher is added to the ten days
1087:
Thanks for editing the section I added to the Maya calendar article about the supplementary series. I forgot that Knowledge (XXG) uses the un-conventional convention that text in titles is not in Title Case. I also forgot that the text editor from which I cut and pasted the text adds invisible
5016:
General precession consists of lunisolar precession and planetary precession. Lunisolar precession is constant at 50.4712"/yr over millions of years which appears to be cyclical relative to the fixed stars with a period of 25,678 yr. Planetary precession is Earth's orbit being gravitationally
4265:
You are correct that the day of the week for molad Tishrei is compared to the day of the week for 1 Tishrei or Rosh Hashanah to determine the delay percentages. But they must be calculated for each day of the week, even when those days are not listed among the limits for molad Tishrei. These
1718:
The date of Easter is found from numbers which are allotted to certain dates as indicated in the table at left. For any particular year, the number which is taken is the same as the remainder that is obtained when one is added to the year and the total divided by nineteen. If there is no
1250:
Two comments that do not bear exactly on accessing this data. (1) It is probable that this work was never under copyright, because by law, writing created by US federal employees in the course of their duties is in the public domain. (2) Google books seem to have a rough time classifying old
2322:
Dear Mister Kress, Verzeihung bitte für mein langes Schweigen, es hat private Gründe. Am 17.Januar 2010 entfernte der IP 62.31.226.77 die Datei „Gregorian calendar“ wegen eines vermeintlichen Fehlers innerhalb der Datei . Es betrifft den Umrechnungshinweis in meiner Datei „File: Permanent
1007:
is that May Day was in fact celebrated in Moscow on May 1, 1918 Gregorian calendar. But by the time the Moscow reporter's report made it to New York, it was already mid May (their earlier articles of the period complained about telegraph cables being cut in Finland, etc etc), and the NYT
4869:
is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
2659:
rule that dōngzhì must be in month 11 is probably that due to Liu Baolin, the former director about 1990 of the Purple Mountain Observatory near Nanjing….— Joe Kress (talk) 00:07, 18 February 2011 (UTC)" Could you tell where you got that? I would really like to find something on it.--
2953:
If you actually try to use the formula (without brackets) using standard mathematics, either on paper or spreadsheet, the formula WILL NOT WORK. It will always give a wrong answer as arithmetic operators are evaluated in order of BIDMAS, not order as per certain programming languages.
5239:
is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 3 December. All users who registered an account before Sunday, 28 October 2018, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Thursday, 1 November 2018 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
4201:
I actually know a decent amount about this, and it's certainly not obvious to me how the table there demonstrates the proposition that "in 39% of years 1 Tishrei is not postponed beyond the day containing molad Tishrei, 47% are postponed one day, and 14% are postponed two days". I
139:
dynamics and specifically daily rotation, requires immediate attention insofar as a society which cannot express the basic facts of planetary shape,rotation and rotational characteristics contained in the fact that the Earth turns at 15 degrees per hour is in serious difficulties.
4759:
It seems to require subscription, but thanks for the direction. Maybe some day I'll find a library I can access it through. In the meantime, my Latin is decent enough that I can translate little sections for myself, and there's always that bootleg English copy if I get hung up.
977: 4745:. At the end of the first paragraph of his Latin chronology is the phrase "in anno Juliani Periodæ 710" which is mistranslated in the English version as "in the year of the Julian Calendar, 710." and the years 710 and 4004 on the right are transposed into the wrong columns. — 2693:
My Liu Baolin source does not mention the origin of the rule, he only states the rule. Liu Baolin and F. Richard Stephenson (Durham University, England) wrote two papers about 1990 but did not publish either at that time. Both were published in 1998 in the obscure journal
1187:
I was interested to see your citation of Newcomb (1895) solar tables (vol.6 of 'A.P.A.E.') with a URL. It's puzzling, but when I try that link, I get to see the summary but the site won't let me see any of the text (although I have a few hard-copy photocopy extracts).
3737:
My references would be to modern usage of the semicolon / comma notation in publications of Babylonian texts, including those by Neugebauer himself. I beleive the statement that he invented the notation appears in one of the eulogies/biographies prepared when he died. —
922:
You responded here before I could revert myself, which I considered but delayed because I wanted to do more research. Similar to you, I suspected that "Russian Republic" in the Pravda article may be a new name for the entire Russian Empire before some regions (including
4189:
I'll grant that your sources are all published and in English, so you won't have the same problems on that account as I did. Still, I'm also feeling quite burned on the question of how much detail seems to be acceptable in articles on Judaism. And I just wonder if the
1412:, now accepted by the United States, does not require any copyright symbol, in contrast with former United States copyright law, which did. That is, a copyright under the Berne Convention is automatic (no symbol), whereas former US law required both registration in the 1320:
The first print was by C.H.Beck-Munic 1992 "Juristenkalender/Steuerberaterkalender". The next print by "Max-Planck-Institut" Heidelberg, see by "Sterne und Weltraum" 5/93. The next print was a poster in special nr.5 from march in year 2000 by "Sterne und Weltraum".
5354: 948:, chapter 19 in История календаря и хронология by Селешников (History of the calendar and chronology by Seleschnikov). Because it is so short and assuming you can read and write Russian, I would appreciate a literal translation of the Pravda article into English. 3546:, on the same page that contains his already cited "bad astronomy" that Earth's north pole will point toward the Sun in December, page 55, states that Earth's northern axis will point near Vega in AD 14,000 or so. I'll continue to try to find better sources. — 962:
in the Gregorian calendar. No confusion is possible with the Gregorian Easter which was over a month earlier. Thus 1 May Gregorian was within Holy Week. I regard both as good evidence, so I don't know which calendar was used to determine when May Day should be
4682:, page 1. Just out of curiosity, did you get that by taking a page out of a PDF of the whole book, or did you physically take a picture? Because if there's a PDF of the whole thing floating around on the internet right now, I'd be very interested in that. 4576:
is open from Monday, 00:00, 21 November through Sunday, 23:59, 4 December to all unblocked users who have registered an account before Wednesday, 00:00, 28 October 2016 and have made at least 150 mainspace edits before Sunday, 00:00, 1 November 2016.
4500:
is open from Monday, 00:00, 21 November through Sunday, 23:59, 4 December to all unblocked users who have registered an account before Wednesday, 00:00, 28 October 2016 and have made at least 150 mainspace edits before Sunday, 00:00, 1 November 2016.
3190:(1937, p. 112) conflated Caesar's unnamed months with Cassius Dio's story (54.21.5) about the corrupt procurator of Gaul who insisted that two more months occurred after December, named either Undécember and Duodécember (accent on first e) or 1379: 3205:
I do not know whether Wilson was the first to conflate these stories. However, I did find Undecimber/Duodecimber also used for two extra months that actually were part of the 'ten-month' calendar of Romulus in the opinion of some scholars. —
1295:, but neither had this series, which is not surprising since most of their books and articles are European. As far as I can see, virtually all astronomy books on Google are classified as juvenile nonfiction, so I pay no attention to that. — 1722:
If the number is in Group A, Easter falls on the Sunday following the date against which that number appears. If the number is in Group B, Easter falls on the Sunday of the week commencing with the date against which that number appears.
3178:
I searched the usual suspects but could not find my source. Because I did not name another emperor for Romanus in the article, neither did my source, whatever that was. So neither I nor my source realized that Romanus was solely due to
2207:
Joe: I have successfully started an arbitration request on Knowledge (XXG)::Arbitration/Requests/Case/Astronomical year numbering dispute. You are requested to submit your statement in 500 words or less to the referenced case. SamSammy
4206:
I'm supposed to compare the moment of molad Tishrei to the Rosh Hashanah day-of-week. But it's not obvious to me, and most people will just be bewildered by it. (At minimum, I'd urge you to color-code sections to show 0 days, 1 day, 2
4233:
Thanks, and I am also expert in the Gregorian, Julian, Islamic and Chinese calendars, but not the Hindu calendar. As you noted, my sources are secondary rather than primary, which is highly encouraged for Knowledge (XXG) sources, see
3031:
them on Jan 28, 2011, and you've pointed out the fact that you have the table (in slightly modified form) from my image file: "Permanent_calendar.png" was taken! I expect you to immediately attach the appropriate copyright notice.--
1103:
Joe: Thanks for cleaning up the Long Count calendar section about correlations. I reiterate the self-deprecating comments above. I'll add some citations soon where you indicate they are needed in the reference about the lunar age.
4738:. Click the left icon marked "Add to your Marked List" when you hover the cursor over it, then click "Marked List" in the black bars at the top of the page. On the resulting page click "Download document image sets in PDF format". 4935:. I've removed some sections from the existing article and replaced them with the top-level section "Modern definition" and some sub-headings. If you have any comments, they would be welcome in the talk page of the sandbox. 1058: 2486:
You have reverted my Talk:Roche limit (ASEAN Exchange) with statement I have made in wrong place. Where I should write it, because if I don't mistaken Roche limit want me to know him if I made a new article. Thank you so
2548:
The Umm al-Qura calendar is one of the most used Islamic calendars and now Wikipedians are directed to some less reliable calendar converters which do not always give any indication on which algorithms they are based.
5698: 5499: 5267: 4897: 4604: 4528: 1065:) which local governments were authorized to set. Those could be used both to extend the "May Holidays" and "November Holidays" into May 2 and Nov 8, and to provide workers with days off for major religious feasts. 718:
Hi, you seem to be editting the entire talk page, rather than just individual sections. This makes it harder for other readers to tell which section you've added your comments to. Thought you might like to know.
3634:
So I was able to implement the algorithm for the tropical year and the sidereal year, but haven't figured out the anomalistic year. Do you know of an explanation of how the anomalistic year length is calculated?
4443:. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose 3123:
That link was intentional because that disambiguation page defined the intended meaning in its lead (p. m. = afternoon), and none of the other pages listed even mentioned that meaning. A better link is probably
2358:
to "cy" being a recognised abbreviation for century. You refer to the original source as using "cy" but as this is neither a quotation nor an exact copy of what is in it, I can't see how that overrides the MoS.
1691:
of the Church of England or the Church of Ireland. If you speak Welsh you can use the Book of Common Prayer of the Church in Wales. If you don't have access to the book you can access the relevant table at
5132:
That's pretty much what I see in Mosshammer, although just before his comment on the Council implicitly endorsing the rule of the equinox, he says that "By deferring to Rome and Alexandria the council endorsed
1409: 306:
This has overlapped with the picture. This problem is now back again. There maybe another way to fix it that I'm not aware of, but it does the job for now. It seems justified to putback the break tag. Thanks.
844:
have been less crystal clear: e.g., I would not be surprised if the Gregorian Calendar was in fact introduced earlier in German-controlled Ukraine and Belarus, or that cerain "White" governments during the
1444:
and Julian calendar, but not the Gregorian calendar. Since the IP editor is an advocate of the New Calendar, I wonder if this is a matter of what the editor is familiar with, or what the editor advocates.
1476:
years, a solution rejected by Gregory primarily because it messes up the Easter tables. The new leap year rules haven't been widely publicised because of the misinformation campaign, so here they are.
4349:
Thank you, Joe. I actually had a pretty good sense of the calculation already. My point was more that if the table itself was supposed to make the calculation transparent or obvious, it didn't succeed.
748:
I just tried to use a section edit in an article and found it utterly useless if a reference is included, because the text of references are in another section which is not shown in "Show preview". —
5682:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 5483:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 5251:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 4881:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 4588:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 4512:. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose 4214:
Look, what you did there is a nice piece of work, unquestionably. Still, you might consider the question of whether a section like that ought to be spun out into a second article. I just don't know.
904: 1715:
is not a leap year unless it gives remainder two or seven when its other digits are divided by nine. A year which is not a leap year ends on the same day of the week as that on which it began.
879:, the terms "Old Style" and "New Style" have the same significance as elsewhere. The start of the year was moved to 1 January in 1700, but the Gregorian calendar was introduced only after the 609:
I wasn't actually aware of the "sup" and "smallsup" templates. It is a lot more convenient and the small superscript does look a lot better. I'll probably use that one, thanks for that tip.
668:
I do not use e-mail with Knowledge (XXG). I do not know what you mean by a "bronze calendar". I have no interest whatsoever in proposed calendars, only in historical or existing calendars. —
5668: 5469: 3719:
One thing that intrigues me is that you credit Neugebauer with creating the standard semicolon / comma notation in the 30s; it sounds right -- I imagine it's in his early German writings?
1416:
and a distinct copyright symbol. Thus the presence of a copyright symbol does not affect the copyright status of the work. I was thinking in terms of the old law rather than current law. —
4242:). Even if the English source is only a translated version of the Hebrew primary source, in some respects it becomes a secondary source itself. By its very argumentative nature, even the 511:
have you actually checked the reference to make sure it contains appropiate information? From your edit summary I get the impression you have added it on the assumption that it was what
4352:
This article is horribly bloated. You're right about that! I've looked at it, wanting to take a big bite out of it, more than once. And then I don't even know where to begin. So I don't.
3626:
Simon, JL, P Bretagnon, J. Charpront, M. Chapront-Touzé, G. Francou, and J. Laskar (1994). Numerical Expressions for Precession Formulae and Mean Elements for te Moon and the Planets.
4734:(I'm not sure if this requires a library that subscribes to it). Search for Author Keywords: James Ussher and Title Keywords: Annals of the World. Their PDF instructions are in their 5044:
is the average precession rate of Jupiter's longitude of perihelion, +4.257452"/yr (304,407 yr). Another secular resonance with the same magnitude as the Jupiter-Saturn resonance is
1687:
The next thing is to see how the quantities are manipulated to give the date of Easter Sunday. Let's take an actual year - 2410. To do the calculation you'll need a copy of the
20: 16: 4655:
to see why it has been listed (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry). Feel free to add your opinion on the matter below the nomination. Thank you.
3417:
You sometimes say, if there a more things name Abc Classname, then the class name should get lower case, because the term is not a proper name. But only because there are several
3160:
2004. I'm not able to find a source for it, and Scott's article on honorific months, which is pretty comprehensive, knows nothing about it. Can you tell me where it comes from?
1468:. The claim is that Gregory XIII's Bull mandates the use of the observed vernal equinox in the regulation of the Gregorian calendar. That's exactly what the claim is - bull. 1287:, even though it was published in London, not the US (he did not reveal his country). He was able to access the corrupt text provided by the Internet Archive. I just checked the 2755:
In the second paper Liu states that he was the chief author of a series of books giving tables of the Chinese calendar according to modern calculations to replace the erroneous
935:
of 3 March 1918 makes this interpretation virtually certain. I was also uncertain how to mention the post-1922 Soviet Union. I have reverted myself and reworded the passage in
2778:
Thanks for the information. But, the 1959 book was 二百年历表 : 1821-2020年, so it did not include 2033. Therefore the 1984 book was probably the first modern table to include it.--
2428:
At least a small "explanation" !... So, is the name "the World Calendar" a RTM, with these "intempestive" capital letters everywhere ? And then why never quotation marks ?...
1492:- if the last two digits are 00, ignore them and divide the rest of the number by nine. If there is a remainder of two or seven the year is a leap year. If not, it isn't. 2639:, which I find very useful, while you leave similar sites like phoneticise.com in the article which does basically the same but less advanced and with lots of advertisement. 4650: 3712:
on notation as a lead in to converting the article to standard (Neugebauer) notation. I note that you put some good material on sexagesimal notation in the article on
1012:
that the Russians were still on Julian calendar, and wrote the final text accordingly. I am sure they had fact checkers, but those probably weren't very up-to-date...
891:" dated March 9  1918, January 31, 1918 (Old style) was to be followed by February 14, 1918 (New style). Therefore, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 is referred to as 3586:
Also, for individual documents the ITU-R librarians are providing the service of individual copies, so most of the defining documents for UTC are readily obtainable.
1726:
If the number is in Group C, the date against which it appears is to be treated as a day of March, and Easter falls on the day after the Saturday following that date.
1000: 2374: 366:
I'm using Firefox 3.0.13, in which the text doesn't appear to wrap around the picture properly. It might a problem with the brower as opposed to the page. Thanks.
3254: 3087: 2039: 980:
by adding much of the information I found and provided additional valuable information which I should include in the English article. By the way, Roscoe Lamont in
848:
turned back the clock in the areas they controlled. (I don't actually know if any of that was the case; I do note though that in mid-May 1918, the New York Times
2113:, similarly to how semi-protection is applied but in a more controlled way for the trial. The list of articles with pending changes awaiting review is located at 4363:
section have to merge. But until/unless they do, I think the molad Tishrei calculations probably belong in whichever is first, because they are germain to both.
2451:
is "Knowledge (XXG) has no firm rules" so any rule may be ignored unless other editors object, then consensus must be reached on the talk page of the article. —
1464:
Good morning, Joe. Can I debunk a falsehood which you, Simon Cassidy and most of the other usual suspects have been putting out for many years now? See e.g.
3250: 3083: 2408:
YOUR NEW: Every weekday is assigned to (the same) date. = No because that can be read as if every date is (the same) date; 365 or 366 days, all the same date.
4778:. Scroll down to the download options, select PDF, and both volumes appear as separate PDF files. Just to be complete, the Latin parts are on Google Books at 2045:
Since you seem very knowledgeable about astronomy I'd like to ask you for your opinion on a recent addition to this page. It looks like fringe science to me.
4266:
percentages may already be mentioned in my sources although I did not specifically check for them. For your information, the detailed calculations follow. —
5421: 5194: 4091: 3925: 3341: 3264: 3097: 2436: 4250:
requirement, even though it is not published in a scholarly reliable source per se. The postponements are already in the article in significant detail (at
2564:
I thought that a link could not be both a reference and an external link, but I can't find any such prohibition, so I'm reinstating your external link. —
2957:
Before you remove these brackets again, please just try the calcualtion for yourself. It is very confusing because the answer is always wrong in Excel.
4401:. I was considering breaking out molad Tishrei as a separate section before the postponement section, but one larger section is another possibility. — 2950:
The formula shown on the page (winthout brackets) will only work in certain programming languages, due to order of precidence of arithmetic operators.
5327: 5138:
Alexandrian cycle to the council. If this article's historical component is to be brought up to date, it should discuss that claim and its influence.
4046: 1219:
american ephemeris and nautical almanac". "Other editions" is usually the last link under any edition that is listed under a specific title. —
5417: 5190: 4087: 3921: 3337: 3260: 3093: 3051: 585:)—the underline indicating a link should be continuous with that under normally sized characters. You might consider replacing 10<sup: --> 5720: 5521: 5281: 4911: 4618: 4468: 3602: 3542:
north pole has not yet reached its closest approach to Polaris), especially because Vega is much brighter than Polaris. Philip C. Plait in
2275:(農曆) and the lunar year. Sexagenary cycle also has its own way to record months, days, and even hours. Sexagenary cycle begins itself with 2065: 1145: 77: 3331: 653:
Dear Joe Kress Please contact me via wikipaedia internal e-mail. I have a bronze calender and wish to discuss it. cheers chris-do-algarve
2843:
between 1910 and 2108, indicating he would mention his own 'error'. Only copies of the 1959 and 1978 editions would settle this issue. —
2744:
Eleventh month, that month after the Winter Solstice which contains no Zhongqi is an intercalary month." In this paper, Liu mentions his
1164:
I will soon create a new article with more extensive tables for converting between the Julian and Gregorian calendar. It is presently at
953:
Thanks for the New York Times article. It is indeed quite confusing. All three dates in the article imply that May Day was celebrated on
884: 864: 3516: 2964: 2928: 2903: 2224: 2000: 1983: 1730:
For Orthodox Easter, ignore the brackets. Easter is the Sunday after the Wednesday following the date against which the number appears
774:
or {{reflist}} tag at the end of the section prior to previewing it, but that temporary tag must be removed before the edit is saved. —
692: 5180: 2431:
All the best agains covid virus.  :-( François from Paris, France, and (little) "armorican" Brittany... (VirguloMane, April 2nd 2020)
5628: 5048:= 50.6408"/yr (25,592 yr). Many other much smaller resonances are also present. Yr is Earth's year not that of Jupiter or Saturn. See 3327: 2992: 625: 556: 433: 382: 323: 270: 203: 4705: 4050: 5168: 2698:. Both of these papers are referred to (by author, not title) within the Chinese calendar section of "Chapter 12: Calendars" in the 2640: 2609: 4646: 4394: 1440:. An interesting coincidence is that for the two years (1200 and 2800) I checked, the procedure works for converting between the 163: 516: 5716: 5636: 5517: 5377: 5277: 4907: 4614: 4464: 2921:
and, apparently, the occultation predictions made on that site are impossible, which might explain why the creator deleted it.
5691: 5492: 5260: 4890: 4597: 4521: 4194:
section, with all the detail, demonstration of how often Molad Tishrei is delayed, etc., isn't just going to overwhelm people.
3334:). Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 3257:). Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 3090:). Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 4084:. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 3918:. Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. 481:
The AGU page, besides offering an not-scrambled version, also shows a whole lot more material of related reference interest:
5311:. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Knowledge (XXG) under a 4038: 3990: 3202:
Wilson ignored the consuls named by Cassius Dio in that story's chapter (21) that indicated it occurred in 15 BC, not 46 BC.
2300: 2129: 3509:
to be fairly solid too (though one of them is broken), but perhaps the length of the Great Year is still not fully fixed.
936: 849: 830: 807: 5316: 4042: 2350:
in which I replaced the confusing abbreviation "cy" with "century". I had not understood immediately what "cy" meant and
1390:
means that the licensor retains the copyright, and is free to grant additional licenses to others, or under other terms.
581:
for technical reasons, so I won't object. However, I think the short line under the superscript in linked names is ugly (
2411:
See if this sounds any closer to you: ‘Each day is assigned an exact and repetitive date relative to week and month.’
2381:
is the statement "In scientific articles, use the units employed in the current scientific literature on that topic." —
5176: 4455:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to
4025: 2133: 2099: 5703: 5504: 5407: 5272: 4954:
Sorry, I don't understand how my comment got tagged on the end of this one. Not what I intended. Appologies to Jc3s5h
4902: 4609: 4533: 4460: 3709: 2918: 2405:
WAS: Every date is assigned (the same) weekday. = Yes, but does not exactly account for Worlds Day and Leapyear Day.
73: 5307: 2677:
I think the choice of the 11th month for this (IMO a bad choice) may be because the Sui starts with the 11th month.
2674:
One could in principle, have a rule that fixes one given month of the year to always contain its own principal term.
1436:
You might be interested to know that an incorrect calendar conversion procedure is being repeatedly introduced into
5632: 5552: 5373: 4642: 4076:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Knowledge (XXG) appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited
3910:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Knowledge (XXG) appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited
3535: 3531: 2893: 1324:
I am the dokument for "the first perpedual and permanent calendar" from "Guinnessbuch-Verlag" oct/1998, please see
4149: 4145: 3986: 2106: 3400: 3047: 1680:
dropped and then LUN is added (disregarding the minus sign) this gives the difference between the two calendars.
1235:
I guess I'll have to try and see if there's any way I can get to see a download made from where it is available.
34:. Because this is fictional and matches Asimov's spelling of "centads", it should not be changed to "decades". — 3582:
In addition to the NBS Monograph 140 reprint of CCIR 460 there is a retyped copy of CCIR 460-1 as appendix C of
2448: 2303:. Your gut reaction would be appreciated but remember this not a final draft! It is, however, a major rewrite, 1495:
The next bit concerns the Easter tables. You are clued up on them, but others aren't, so please bear with me.
859: 658: 5150: 5096: 4974:
Can you point me to what these periods relate to? I don't seem to be able to find any mention now I need it.
4775: 3727: 3598: 2308: 2069: 81: 5679: 5480: 5248: 4878: 4585: 4509: 4235: 4177:
I've got a question for you, though: Do you really think that level of detail is appropriate to the article?
3185: 1699:
Golden Number but if there is no remainder the Golden Number is nineteen. For 2410 the Golden Number is 17.
1251:
astronomy books; I have seen several classified as juvenile non-fiction (or maybe it was juvenile fiction). --
1149: 984:
translated Peter the Great's AD 1699 (AM 7208) edict adopting 1 January as New Years Day beginning in 1700. —
2228: 2004: 4832: 3854:
again to fix it. If I misunderstood what happened, or if you have any questions, you can leave a message on
3784:
again to fix it. If I misunderstood what happened, or if you have any questions, you can leave a message on
3518: 3242: 3227: 3168: 3075: 2968: 2930: 2905: 1987: 932: 696: 5411: 5184: 4982: 3590: 2960: 2644: 1996: 1141: 999:
Thanks for reverting and rewriting; I think it looks fine now. I added the full translation of the text to
958:
Bright Week, the week after Easter Sunday). In 1918, Julian Easter was 22 April in the Julian calendar and
702: 4742: 3534:
to see if I can track down any citations for data that I haven't been able to cite or refute. I'm keeping
2996: 2783: 2664: 2636: 2419: 2114: 618: 549: 426: 375: 316: 263: 196: 4456: 4054: 2095: 1275: 1212: 1209: 302:"These festivities recall the story of creation and the ancient cosmology of Iranian and Persian people." 3959:
article, and I really like it. I've nominated the article for GA status, if you are interested. Thanks.
3583: 3473: 2749: 2682: 2021: 1214:. If that is not the problem, you might try another Google books site. Just change the language code in 1109: 1093: 654: 468: 464: 100: 5594: 4961:
Hi Joe. I found your comments on axial precession and the IAU models seemed particularly well informed.
3716:, but didn't provide links to references. Do you have sources available for the material you added. 2415: 2098:
on certain flagged pages. Pending changes, also known as flagged protection, is currently undergoing a
467:, it certainly gives a strong showing -- and contains much of wider interest also, specially this item 5403: 4978: 2197:
Joe: I have attempted to submit a request for arbitration and named you as a disputant. SamSammy (
540:
tags, so it should be perfectly justified to restore the superscript tags to the link name. Thanks.
5394:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
5167:
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
3964: 3896: 3819: 3675: 3538:
in my userspace for reference. If you want to help me track some of these down, that would be great.
3036: 3032: 2605: 2328: 2324: 2144: 1333: 1329: 1165: 1129: 822: 762:
Yes, good point. That is a real drawback with section editing. Swings and roundabouts, I guess. --
5662: 5463: 5235: 4865: 4572: 4554: 4496: 4478: 4432: 4423: 4247: 4007:
While all constructive contributions to Knowledge (XXG) are appreciated, content or articles may be
2139:
If you do not want this userright, you may ask any administrator to remove it for you at any time.
1270: 973: 811: 803: 791: 5548: 5146: 5092: 5040:
is the average precession rate of Saturn's longitude of perihelion, +28.2450"/yr (45,884 yr); and g
4997: 4932: 4837: 4368: 4223: 4157: 4141: 4077: 3956: 3911: 3843: 3773: 3723: 3713: 3594: 2304: 2110: 2029: 1413: 1240: 1197: 1168:. I would appreciate it if you would look it over, since I know you are interested in calendars. -- 512: 493: 225: 111: 5675: 5476: 5244: 4874: 4581: 4505: 4452: 4436: 4239: 3222:
and Duodecimber. Too many very archaic festivals in these months for them not to have existed. --
1693: 1328:
Thanks for your job. Ich spreche leider nicht englisch; verzeihen Sie bitte. Greetings from saxnia
578: 4993: 3511: 3447: 3442:
There may be reasons for lower casing, but ambiguity is not a valid pne in the English language.
3408: 3223: 3164: 2923: 2898: 2167: 2050: 1437: 1283:, but he could not access its image via Google, nor via the link to Google books provided by the 892: 880: 868: 810:
with another article. If you are interested in the merge discussion, please participate by going
763: 720: 57: 3999: 3874:{convert|2.5|ft|m} high and {{convert|6.5|ft|m}} square with a large hole for a zinc case filled 3560:
Aonther solution is to put both opinions, 13,000 and 14,000, in the article as 13,000–14,000. —
2583: 2550: 3806:
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/wamo/wash_hsr1.pdf ''Historic Structure Report:
1482:- divide the year's last two digits by four - if there is no remainder the year is a leap year 972:
within which I mention two similar Time Magazine articles which were also confused. I see that
344:
What browser are you using? No overlap exists in either IE7 and FF2 on my computer when I view
298:
Hi again, you seem to have removed the break tag. It was inserted because of this bit of text.
5609: 5567: 5437: 5210: 4675: 4542: 4107: 4021: 3941: 3883:[Judith M. Jacob, [http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/wamo/stones.pdf ''The Washington 3357: 3280: 3113: 2779: 2660: 2364: 1070: 1017: 912: 845: 611: 587:
with 10{{sup|4}} due to the smaller number of typed characters. Although personal preference,
542: 419: 368: 309: 256: 189: 152: 5687: 5488: 5256: 4886: 4593: 4517: 4448: 4440: 4398: 2727:
F. Richard Stephenson and Liu Baolin, "A brief contemporary history of the Chinese calendar"
2355: 2121: 5710: 5511: 5395: 4940: 4783: 4779: 4765: 4687: 4326:
1d: 7d, 6d 0h 0p - 6d 24h 0p, 19y 25920 0.1429 (ignoring 6d 0h 408p & 6d 9h 204p)
4290:
1d: 2d, 1d 0h 0p - 1d 24h 0p, 19y 25920 0.1429 (ignoring 1d 9h 204p & 1d 20h 491p)
4062: 3687: 3659: 3640: 3494: 3469: 2911: 2678: 2530: 2492: 2284: 2272: 2265: 2209: 2198: 2154: 2017: 1450: 1395: 1353: 1344: 1256: 1173: 1105: 1089: 1046: 96: 5690:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 5683: 5491:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 5484: 5259:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 5252: 4889:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 4882: 4596:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 4589: 4520:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 4513: 4451:, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The 4444: 4008: 2800:
Liu mentions five books he authored (listed in the order they appear in the second paper):
2525:
I have forgotten the track, so please forget this matter too. Thank you for your attention.
2444: 2125: 1138:
An anal passage will function quite well, whether liked or not. No worries, mate! MARDYKS
5399: 5335: 5036:
is the precession rate of both Jupiter's and Saturn's nodes, –26.347855"/yr (49,188 yr); g
4251: 4182: 3960: 3892: 3888: 3834: 3815: 3811: 3764: 3464: 3388: 3295: 3156: 2587: 2554: 2507: 2140: 1502:
My table shows the cumulative effect of the two corrections over a full 900 - year cycle.
1465: 1382:, for example, contains the phrase "Licensor hereby grants You a worldwide, royalty-free, 1125: 1028: 969: 876: 815: 685: 525: 249: 5631:? I suspect that we may have a very long-standing, credible, but unsupported assertion.-- 5312: 4823: 2510:, a financial organization. Are you thinking of another person or company named Roche? — 2024:. I saw that you contributed in some discussions, so I thought to ask for your view too. 5414:, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of unrelated topics with similar titles. 5187:, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of unrelated topics with similar titles. 5590: 5115: 5057: 5049: 5001: 4830:. I have now proposed one of the suggested moves independently. Please it discuss at 4795: 4746: 4713: 4660: 4402: 4364: 4267: 4219: 4153: 3739: 3561: 3547: 3396: 3368: 3299: 3207: 3133: 3055: 3011: 2873: 2844: 2761: 2713:
Liu Baolin and F. Richard Stephenson, "The Chinese calendar and its operational rules"
2613: 2565: 2511: 2467: 2452: 2382: 2251: 2247: 2223:
Duh, dunno why I thought that 30 was divisible by 4. No more editing late at night. --
2178: 2025: 1417: 1386:
perpetual (for the duration of the applicable copyright) license..." (emphasis added).
1361: 1296: 1236: 1220: 1193: 1032: 985: 775: 749: 735: 669: 632: 592: 563: 489: 440: 389: 349: 330: 277: 229: 210: 167: 115: 35: 5353: 5053: 4730:
You may be able to access and make a PDF image of the entire original 1658 version at
4389:
I found the delay percentages in Remy Landau's "Hebrew calendar science and myths" at
411: 5540: 5428:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
5201:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
5142: 4928: 4098:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
3932:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
3443: 3404: 3348:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
3271:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
3125: 3104:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow these
2163: 2046: 1280: 53: 4790:(1847), occupying volumes 8-11 and part of 12. But the English parts are not in his 2868: 2735: 2721: 1380:
Knowledge (XXG):Text of Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
981: 855:
Would you find acceptable the following rewrite/expansion of the relevant sections?
5605: 5601: 5563: 5559: 5433: 5429: 5206: 5202: 4538: 4186:
complete mess. Eventually (actually, probably pretty soon), I'm going to go fix it.
4103: 4099: 3937: 3933: 3353: 3349: 3323: 3276: 3272: 3109: 3105: 2440: 2360: 1441: 1066: 1013: 908: 895:, despite having started on 7 November under the Gregorian calendar (25 October ). 730: 148: 31: 5654: 5455: 5226: 4856: 4563: 4487: 4125: 2083: 1472:
day in 3,323 years compared to one day in 128 years under Julius Caesar's system.
1357: 475: 3682:
article. If you have any sources to compare these results to, I'd appreciate it.
3046:
I do not have your table in a modified form. I note that you have requested that
2870: 4936: 4827: 4761: 4683: 4058: 3705: 3683: 3655: 3636: 3490: 3435: 3422: 3418: 2526: 2503: 2488: 2347: 2280: 2243: 1446: 1391: 1252: 1169: 4709: 4697:
It's been so long ago that I don't remember, but I probably obtained it from a
4152:. Congratulations, and thanks for all you do for Knowledge (XXG)'s readers! -- 3887:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow
3810:
It's OK to remove this message. Also, to stop receiving these messages, follow
2128:, and not clearly problematic in light of the reason given for protection (see 5331: 4931:" article and would appreciate it if you could look at my progress so far, at 4701: 3392: 3319: 3191: 2703: 521: 135:
daily and orbital motion and created a catastrophic situation in the process.
4735: 4031:
Please consider improving the article to address the issues raised. Removing
2109:
to articles placed under pending changes. Pending changes is applied to only
1027:
Thanks for translating the Pravda article, which I have tweaked slightly. In
946:История календаря в России и в СССР (Calendar history in Russia and the USSR) 4656: 3007: 945: 145: 4397:, wherein only routine calculations are permitted, such as the examples at 4320:
0p: 5d, 5d 0h 0p - 5d 18h 0p, 19y 19440 0.1071 (ignoring 5d 9h 204p)
4317:
1d: 5d, 4d 0h 0p - 4d 24h 0p, 19y 25920 0.1429 (ignoring 4d 11h 695p)
482: 4965: 3877:, including the 100-foot stone but not the ] stone.<ref name=Jacob: --> 3465:
http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Proleptic_Gregorian_calendar#Days_of_the_Week
1707:
April 25, the (wrong) full moon having fallen on Monday 19th at 6.28 P.M.
931:) were ceded to Germany and subsequently became autonomous republics. The 5624: 5369: 5084: 4390: 3674:
I have created a section on the variation in lengths of various years at
515:
meant to do. When I removed the strange bit of RadioFan's edit I left a
5694:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
5495:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
5263:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
4893:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
4704:. It is much easier these days. A PDF of the Latin version (1650) is at 4634: 4600:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
4524:
describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
4284:
Delay: 1 Tishrei, from - to, years, parts, fraction (% of 7d × % of 19y)
2710:(1997) by Dershowitz and Reingold also refers to them. The papers were: 2375:
Knowledge (XXG):Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Units of measurement
798: 474:
There's also something curious about it, if you compare it with another
5724: 5672:
are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
5640: 5613: 5571: 5525: 5473:
are allowed to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
5441: 5381: 5339: 5285: 5214: 5154: 5123: 5100: 5065: 5009: 4986: 4944: 4915: 4844: 4803: 4769: 4754: 4741:
My interest in the document is his use of the Julian Period created by
4721: 4691: 4664: 4622: 4546: 4472: 4439:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Knowledge (XXG)
4410: 4372: 4275: 4227: 4161: 4111: 4066: 3968: 3945: 3900: 3823: 3747: 3731: 3704:
I'm troubled by the anomalous sexagesimal notation used in the article
3691: 3663: 3644: 3618:
I'm trying to find the algorithm used to calculate year lengths in the
3606: 3569: 3555: 3524: 3498: 3477: 3451: 3412: 3376: 3361: 3307: 3284: 3231: 3215: 3172: 3141: 3117: 3063: 3040: 3019: 3000: 2972: 2936: 2881: 2852: 2787: 2769: 2686: 2668: 2648: 2621: 2591: 2573: 2558: 2534: 2519: 2496: 2475: 2460: 2423: 2390: 2368: 2332: 2312: 2288: 2259: 2232: 2213: 2202: 2186: 2171: 2148: 2073: 2054: 2033: 1991: 1454: 1425: 1399: 1369: 1337: 1304: 1284: 1260: 1244: 1228: 1215: 1201: 1177: 1153: 1133: 1113: 1097: 1074: 1040: 1021: 993: 928: 924: 916: 824: 783: 766: 757: 743: 723: 706: 677: 662: 640: 600: 571: 529: 497: 448: 397: 357: 345: 338: 285: 237: 218: 175: 156: 123: 104: 85: 61: 43: 3708:(using semicolons following modern time notation), so I'm preparing a 976:
has modified the previously incorrect Russian Knowledge (XXG) article
5544: 5172: 4698: 4243: 3847: 3777: 3584:
http://www.pttimeeting.org/archivemeetings/1974papers/Vol%2006_18.pdf
2748:
published in 1984 by the Purple Mountain Observatory, referred to at
2437:
Knowledge (XXG):Manual of Style/Capital letters#Capitalization of The
2276: 1269:
I learned about selective geographic availability from complaints to
582: 74:
Talk:NATO phonetic alphabet#Charlie Racist and the "Growing Movement"
1288: 1057:
I've expanded that article a bit, based on the meticulously written
3868:
The cornerstone was a {{convert|24,500|lb|kg|adj=on}} marble block
2865:
Orion : Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen Astronomischen Gesellschaft
1279:
by Samuel Butcher (1877). I mentioned it to an anonymous editor on
5629:
Talk:Calendar (New Style) Act 1750#Deceiving the Church of England
4674:
Hey. I noticed that you uploaded a file that currently appears at
4081: 3915: 3291: 3246: 3129: 2631:
Just wondered why you removed (05:07, 16 August 2011) the link to
1045: 900: 888: 858: 2354:
is not helpful. I can't find any references in Knowledge (XXG)'s
2120:
When reviewing, edits should be accepted if they are not obvious
814:, and adding your comments on the discussion page. Thank you. – 5707:. If you no longer wish to receive these messages, you may add 5586: 5581:
An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
5539:
An automated process has detected that when you recently edited
5508:. If you no longer wish to receive these messages, you may add 4731: 3850:
by modifying 1 ""s and 1 "{}"s. If you have, don't worry: just
3679: 3438:- defined rivers by that name, it doesn't matter there are many. 2760:
at least that early and may have been devised by Liu himself. —
469:
Astrometric and geodetic properies of Earth and the Solar System
5697:
If you wish to participate in the 2020 election, please review
5498:
If you wish to participate in the 2019 election, please review
5266:
If you wish to participate in the 2018 election, please review
4896:
If you wish to participate in the 2017 election, please review
4603:
If you wish to participate in the 2016 election, please review
4527:
If you wish to participate in the 2016 election, please review
4174:
Congratulatons! You're even more of a calendar geek than I am.
3367:
Other wikilinks were also erroneous, so I corrected several. —
2022:
Talk:Iranian_calendar#Changing_title_to_.22Iranian_calendarS.22
1325: 5666:
is now open until 23:59 (UTC) on Monday, 7 December 2020. All
3425:
these are still proper names, albeit ambiguous ones. Compare:
2443:
which Knowledge (XXG)'s Manual of Style also frowns upon, see
1486:
the last two digits are 00, in which case it probably is not.
488:
So thanks for the Yoder link and the others: With good wishes
3387:
The named meridians are proper nouns and like "Mountains" in
3194:
and Duodecimber (I've seen both pairs). Wilson's words were:
1183:
Enquiry about your reference/citation to Newcomb solar tables
903:" sounds inappropriate to you for some reason, we could use " 5296: 4633: 3977: 3630:, 663-683. Paper available through Astrophysics Data System. 2835:
You have given the second book above (二百年历表 literally means
2082: 471:, it looks like a whole treasure-house I didn't see before. 3622:. The notes on page L8 say they are derived from the paper 3079: 2447:, search for "scare-quoting". However, the fifth pillar of 2351: 2177:
I'm compromising by including both "India and Mongolia". —
2132:). More detailed documentation and guidelines can be found 577:
I found an exception to the general rule against piping in
463:
Hallo Joe K, thanks for posting your list of references on
5627:, so I wondered if perhaps you might be able to advise at 2632: 1001:
commons:File:Sovnarkom-Gregorian-Calendar-Decree-izo39.jpg
5582: 3050:
be deleted because you have uploaded the revised version
2947:
Don't know why you removed the brackets, please explain?
1343:
Thank you, but I have already read this twice, including
1292: 944:
I was aware of the Pravda article because it appeared in
773:
A workaround is to temporarily add a <references/: -->
5467:
is now open until 23:59 on Monday, 2 December 2019. All
5108:
The Easter Computus and the Origins of the Christian Era
4393:, so I don't run afoul of the Knowledge (XXG) policy of 2397:
The World Calendar, AKA World Calendar @ Knowledge (XXG)
1276:
The ecclesiastical calendar: Its theory and construction
5678:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
5585:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 5543:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 5479:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
5398:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 5293:
Orphaned non-free image File:A.Wynn Howell portrait.png
5247:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
5171:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 5080: 4877:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
4584:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
4508:
is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the
4080:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 4049:
process can result in deletion without discussion, and
3914:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 3855: 3851: 3839: 3785: 3781: 3769: 3322:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 3245:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 3078:, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page 2988: 2984: 2343: 1408:
Upon further consideration, you're probably right. The
508: 4014:
You may prevent the proposed deletion by removing the
3026:
Difference between Gregorian and Julian calendar dates
2917:
BTW, I've had a discussion with an astronomer over at
2750:
Talk:Chinese calendar#Month 11 rule is not always true
1088:
newlines. Also, I'm a crappy typist and proof-reader.
2105:
Reviewers can review edits made by users who are not
4966:
https://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Axial_precession#Cause
4329:
0d: 7d, 7d 0h 0p - 7d 18h 0p, 19y 19440 0.1071
4323:
2d: 7d, 5d 18h 0p - 5d 24h 0p, 19y 6480 0.0357
4314:
2d: 5d, 3d 18h 0p - 3d 24h 0p, 19y 6480 0.0357
4311:
0d: 3d, 3d 9h 204p - 3d 18h 0p, 7y 9516 0.0193
4308:
2d: 5d, 3d 9h 204p - 3d 18h 0p, 12y 9516 0.0331
4305:
0d: 3d, 3d 0h 0p - 3d 9h 204p, 19y 9924 0.0547
4302:
1d: 3d, 2d 18h 0p - 2d 24h 0p, 19y 6480 0.0357
4299:
0d: 2d, 2d 15h 589p - 2d 18h 0p, 12y 2651 0.0092
4296:
1d: 3d, 2d 15h 589p - 2d 18h 0p, 7y 2651 0.0054
4293:
0d: 2d, 2d 0h 0p - 2d 15h 589p, 19y 16789 0.0925
4287:
2d: 2d, 7d 18h 0p - 7d 24h 0p, 19y 6480 0.0357
2991:
edit to fix how the lead of the article is written.
2828:
Newly compiled perpetual Chinese calendar, 1840–2050
4992:This will require some research. Possibilities are 4708:, whereas a PDF of the Englsh version (1658) is at 4630:
File:Anaconda NRHP photo1.png listed for discussion
4246:can be considered a secondary source regarding the 3780:by modifying 1 ""s. If you have, don't worry: just 1499:over a long period to one thirtieth of a lunation. 1378:Joe, I believe that is incorrect. The terms of the 1271:
HASTRO-L, The History of Astronomy Discussion Group
802:An article that you have been involved in editing, 591:results in a smaller superscript font: 10 vs 10. — 142:The simple formal proof for rotation in 24 hours - 5326:will be deleted after seven days, as described in 4818:RM: Hijra (South Asia) → Hijra (transgender group) 4678:, containing a scan of the first page of Ussher's 4338:0d: 0.3899 (39%) 1d: 0.4698 (47%) 2d: 0.1402 (14%) 4181:I went through a whole process to get the article 2700:Explanatory supplement to the Astronomical Almanac 852:about the current calendar situation in Moscow.) 459:References for invariable plane and other subjects 164:Talk:Earth's rotation#Earth's rotation in 24 hours 49:Thanks for spotting that. Consider it excepted! :) 5390:Disambiguation link notification for September 25 4431:You appear to be eligible to vote in the current 3974:Proposed deletion of Helen Wills (disambiguation) 3184:However, my search did find that P. W. Wilson in 1352:Vielen Dank, aber ich habe schon gelesen das auf 5535:Disambiguation link notification for December 25 3863:List of unpaired brackets remaining on the page: 3798:is not mentioned.<ref name=construction/: --> 3793:List of unpaired brackets remaining on the page: 3399:should be kept capitalized. I started a talk at 3006:After the article's name in the first sentence, 5577:Disambiguation link notification for January 16 5372:article thorough, accurate and comprehensive. 5163:Disambiguation link notification for October 28 2040:Talk:Secular variations of the planetary orbits 300: 146:http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Earth%27s_rotation 5328:section F5 of the criteria for speedy deletion 5322:Note that any non-free images not used in any 3955:Hi Joe. I noticed your large expansion of the 3906:Disambiguation link notification for January 8 2271:Sexagenary cycle has NO relationship with the 4788:The Whole Works of the Most Rev. James Ussher 4072:Disambiguation link notification for April 22 3314:Disambiguation link notification for April 11 8: 5106:Thanks for the Mosshammer (2008) reference ( 4774:I found it! Both parts of the Annals are at 4218:Anyway, thank you for a nice piece of work. 3650:Never mind; I figured it out. The notes the 3401:Talk:Meridian (geography)#Dubious page moves 3237:Disambiguation link notification for April 4 2734:, Jahrgang 56, Nr. 287, August 1998, 33–38. 1460:Tall stories: Meletian calendar v Gregorian 5649: 5623:I notice that you are a regular editor at 5450: 4144:(estimated annual readership: 487,164) to 2804:Pocket 20-year Chinese calendar, 1981–2000 2720:, Jahrgang 56, Nr. 286, Juni 1998, 16–19. 2610:Talk:Credit score (United States)#CE Score 2090:Hello. Your account has been granted the " 1124:Do you think Mardyks doesn't like me? :-) 187:antipode on the prime meridian? Thanks. 4123: 2746:Newly compiled perpetual Chinese calendar 1293:Gallica, Bibliotheque nationale de France 729:You are correct. Although I have "Enable 130:Affirmation of daily rotation in 24 hours 5141:Maybe we should copy this discussion to 2157:Mongolia is implied in Turkish/Mongolian 2064:There is currently a discussion on ANI. 1734: 1504: 883:of 1917. According to the decree by the 30:Please add an exception for "decads" in 4020:notice, but please explain why in your 2654:11th-month rule of the Chinese calendar 2020:to "Iranian calendars" (with an -S) in 691:Thanks for help on the reference, man. 346:Equinox#Cultural aspects of the equinox 3536:a truncated version of the old article 3484:Thanks for the help (Axial_Precession) 2301:User:Peter Mercator/Draft for Latitude 939:to include the post-1922 Soviet Union. 112:Talk:Greek numerals#Alternate name ref 5056:. This may be what you alluded to. — 4641:A file that you uploaded or altered, 3837:. I have automatically detected that 3767:. I have automatically detected that 3052:File:Permanent_Calendar_gregorian.png 1003:. As to the May 1918 NYT article, my 32:Decimal time#Decimal times in fiction 7: 5663:2020 Arbitration Committee elections 5464:2019 Arbitration Committee elections 5236:2018 Arbitration Committee elections 4866:2017 Arbitration Committee elections 4786:. Both Latin parts are reprinted in 4647:Knowledge (XXG):Files for discussion 4573:2016 Arbitration Committee elections 4497:2016 Arbitration Committee elections 3155:I've been doing some cleanup on the 2816:100-year Chinese calendar, 1901–2000 2810:200-year Chinese calendar, 1821–2020 2162:calendar up to the present. Thanks, 1050:Public holidays in Russia, 1921-2008 483:Global Earth Physics (handbook) 1995 5680:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 5646:ArbCom 2020 Elections voter message 5481:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 5249:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 4879:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 4586:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 4510:Knowledge (XXG) arbitration process 2888:I hope I haven't upset you too much 2012:Changing title to Iranian CalendarS 1354:User talk:Jc3s5h#perpedual calendar 1345:User talk:Jc3s5h#perpedual calendar 1216:http://books.google.com/books?hl=en 850:may still have been rather confused 5447:ArbCom 2019 election voter message 5220:ArbCom 2018 election voter message 4850:ArbCom 2017 election voter message 4009:deleted for any of several reasons 3993:because of the following concern: 2887: 1466:User talk:Sebsf#Gregorian calendar 1317:Hello Mr.Joe Kress, my copyright: 885:Council of the People's Commissars 865:Council of the People's Commissars 14: 5169:Introduction to the metric system 5089:History of the Christian Councils 4457:review the candidates' statements 4148:status, I hereby present you the 3799:{{rp|67–73}}<ref name=HSR: --> 2130:Knowledge (XXG):Reviewing process 2102:scheduled to end 15 August 2010. 2016:I proposed changing the title of 982:The reform of the Julian calendar 978:Советский революционный календарь 907:" (see where the 2 links point). 95:Why did you remove my reference? 5653: 5454: 5352: 5233:Hello, Joe Kress. Voting in the 5225: 4863:Hello, Joe Kress. Voting in the 4855: 4570:Hello, Joe Kress. Voting in the 4562: 4494:Hello, Joe Kress. Voting in the 4486: 4140:For your contributions to bring 4124: 3828: 3758: 3578:Leap second & UTC references 3530:BTW, I've decided to go back to 3128:, which it the redirect link of 3070:Disambiguation link notification 797: 520:without checking with RadioFan. 410: 226:Talk:180th meridian#Article name 5701:and submit your choices on the 5502:and submit your choices on the 5308:File:A.Wynn Howell portrait.png 5270:and submit your choices on the 4900:and submit your choices on the 4822:You recently participated in a 3678:. I plan to insert this in the 2822:Pocket 10-year Chinese calendar 2506:, an astronomical problem, and 2060:As soon as my back is turned... 1008:editor/staff writer there just 5442:13:18, 25 September 2019 (UTC) 4463:. For the Election committee, 4433:Arbitration Committee election 4424:ArbCom elections are now open! 3628:Astronomy and Astrophysics 282 2627:Link in NATO phonetic alphabet 2502:I see no relationship between 2449:Knowledge (XXG)'s Five pillars 2379:Scientific and technical units 2318:File: „Permanent_calendar.png“ 641:17:21, 11 September 2009 (UTC) 601:00:29, 11 September 2009 (UTC) 572:12:53, 10 September 2009 (UTC) 476:copy I found online at the AGU 21:/Archive 2006/10/15–2009/04/20 17:/Archive 2004/03/23–2006/10/08 1: 5725:01:15, 24 November 2020 (UTC) 5641:16:48, 12 November 2020 (UTC) 5619:Calendar (New Style) Act 1750 5572:08:37, 25 December 2019 (UTC) 5526:00:03, 19 November 2019 (UTC) 5317:our policy for non-free media 5286:18:42, 19 November 2018 (UTC) 4643:File:Anaconda NRHP photo1.png 4623:22:08, 21 November 2016 (UTC) 4547:22:08, 21 November 2016 (UTC) 4473:22:12, 30 November 2015 (UTC) 3901:20:35, 22 December 2014 (UTC) 3824:21:41, 19 December 2014 (UTC) 3748:21:59, 13 December 2012 (UTC) 3318:Hi. When you recently edited 3241:Hi. When you recently edited 3074:Hi. When you recently edited 3020:01:03, 23 November 2011 (UTC) 3001:17:01, 22 November 2011 (UTC) 2937:10:25, 10 November 2011 (UTC) 2445:WP:MOS#Typographic conformity 2094:" userright, allowing you to 1455:21:08, 16 February 2010 (UTC) 1426:22:06, 14 February 2010 (UTC) 1400:20:27, 10 February 2010 (UTC) 1370:20:14, 10 February 2010 (UTC) 1338:14:25, 10 February 2010 (UTC) 1134:07:00, 14 December 2009 (UTC) 937:Old Style and New Style dates 831:Old Style and New Style dates 825:01:38, 28 November 2009 (UTC) 784:00:30, 15 November 2009 (UTC) 767:22:37, 14 November 2009 (UTC) 758:22:10, 14 November 2009 (UTC) 744:09:55, 14 November 2009 (UTC) 724:07:40, 14 November 2009 (UTC) 530:10:05, 2 September 2009 (UTC) 498:15:43, 1 September 2009 (UTC) 449:21:31, 9 September 2009 (UTC) 5614:08:53, 16 January 2020 (UTC) 5215:09:07, 28 October 2018 (UTC) 5155:19:32, 27 October 2018 (UTC) 5124:02:35, 27 October 2018 (UTC) 5101:01:58, 26 October 2018 (UTC) 5072:Council of Nicaea and Easter 4916:18:42, 3 December 2017 (UTC) 4665:21:43, 6 February 2017 (UTC) 4391:The Postponement Frequencies 4067:20:13, 30 January 2015 (UTC) 3987:Helen Wills (disambiguation) 3969:03:35, 16 January 2015 (UTC) 3732:02:55, 2 December 2012 (UTC) 3692:17:27, 5 November 2012 (UTC) 3664:20:18, 11 October 2012 (UTC) 3645:15:56, 10 October 2012 (UTC) 3457:Proleptic Gregorian Calendar 3395:is capitalized, Meridian in 3232:22:24, 8 February 2012 (UTC) 3216:05:21, 8 February 2012 (UTC) 3173:03:01, 3 February 2012 (UTC) 3148:Renaming November as Romanus 3142:00:43, 10 January 2012 (UTC) 2973:09:20, 4 November 2011 (UTC) 2912:19:40, 13 October 2011 (UTC) 2702:(1992), most of which is at 2333:20:00, 28 January 2011 (UTC) 2260:06:14, 18 October 2010 (UTC) 1326:http://www.ewige-kalender.de 1313:Permanent gregorian calendar 1305:23:08, 24 January 2010 (UTC) 1261:20:06, 24 January 2010 (UTC) 1245:18:40, 24 January 2010 (UTC) 1229:08:12, 24 January 2010 (UTC) 1202:02:34, 24 January 2010 (UTC) 1178:16:30, 20 January 2010 (UTC) 1098:21:33, 4 December 2009 (UTC) 1075:08:23, 5 December 2009 (UTC) 1059:ru:История праздников России 1041:04:33, 5 December 2009 (UTC) 1022:01:47, 5 December 2009 (UTC) 994:23:14, 4 December 2009 (UTC) 917:03:41, 4 December 2009 (UTC) 707:04:56, 27 October 2009 (UTC) 678:07:37, 21 October 2009 (UTC) 663:19:10, 20 October 2009 (UTC) 5066:19:13, 4 October 2018 (UTC) 5010:00:07, 3 October 2018 (UTC) 4987:22:31, 2 October 2018 (UTC) 4927:I'm trying to improve the " 4727:01:38, 25 April 2017 (UTC) 4680:Annals of the Old Testament 4607:and submit your choices on 4531:and submit your choices on 4459:and submit your choices on 4357:Rosh Hashanah postponements 4053:allows discussion to reach 4034:{{proposed deletion/dated}} 4017:{{proposed deletion/dated}} 3946:09:00, 8 January 2015 (UTC) 3607:23:29, 17 August 2012 (UTC) 3187:The romance of the calendar 3118:11:14, 9 January 2012 (UTC) 3064:04:28, 3 January 2012 (UTC) 3048:File:Permanent_calendar.png 3041:19:21, 1 January 2012 (UTC) 2882:23:03, 9 October 2011 (UTC) 2863:The full title of Orion is 2853:19:51, 8 October 2011 (UTC) 2824:(many editions since 1962). 2788:17:39, 8 October 2011 (UTC) 2770:07:13, 8 October 2011 (UTC) 2687:10:32, 7 October 2011 (UTC) 2669:04:04, 7 October 2011 (UTC) 2649:23:10, 24 August 2011 (UTC) 2313:23:10, 6 January 2011 (UTC) 2289:13:23, 4 January 2011 (UTC) 2233:22:22, 25 August 2010 (UTC) 398:11:32, 10 August 2009 (UTC) 358:01:29, 10 August 2009 (UTC) 182:180th meridian article name 68:NATO Phonetic Alphabet Undo 5744: 5717:MediaWiki message delivery 5518:MediaWiki message delivery 5340:02:23, 30 April 2019 (UTC) 5278:MediaWiki message delivery 4945:12:52, 22 March 2018 (UTC) 4908:MediaWiki message delivery 4780:Annales Veteris Testamenti 4755:19:23, 30 April 2017 (UTC) 4732:Early English Books Online 4722:16:59, 24 April 2017 (UTC) 4706:Annales Veteris Testamenti 4692:11:39, 24 April 2017 (UTC) 4615:MediaWiki message delivery 4605:the candidates' statements 4529:the candidates' statements 4465:MediaWiki message delivery 4252:Rosh Hashanah postponement 4112:09:42, 22 April 2015 (UTC) 4045:exist. In particular, the 3889:these opt-out instructions 3812:these opt-out instructions 3532:11th millennium and beyond 3452:20:00, 19 April 2012 (UTC) 3413:21:43, 18 April 2012 (UTC) 3377:04:21, 12 April 2012 (UTC) 3362:10:56, 11 April 2012 (UTC) 2894:Timeline of the far future 2704:Calendars by L. E. Doggett 2535:06:48, 12 April 2011 (UTC) 2520:04:37, 12 April 2011 (UTC) 2497:01:14, 12 April 2011 (UTC) 2466:at the top of any page. — 2391:18:58, 23 March 2011 (UTC) 2369:14:23, 23 March 2011 (UTC) 2111:a small number of articles 1992:08:45, 30 April 2010 (UTC) 1432:Gregorian calendar article 1154:22:31, 18 March 2010 (UTC) 1114:22:35, 24 March 2010 (UTC) 806:, has been proposed for a 339:23:08, 9 August 2009 (UTC) 286:23:10, 4 August 2009 (UTC) 238:21:57, 4 August 2009 (UTC) 219:23:50, 3 August 2009 (UTC) 5382:21:39, 23 July 2019 (UTC) 5362:The Barnstar of Diligence 5358: 5351: 5297: 4845:00:51, 16 June 2017 (UTC) 4373:20:00, 23 June 2015 (UTC) 4276:21:58, 22 June 2015 (UTC) 4228:22:16, 18 June 2015 (UTC) 4134:The Quarter Million Award 4130: 4039:proposed deletion process 4002:, hatnotes are preferable 3570:04:55, 24 July 2012 (UTC) 3556:04:35, 24 July 2012 (UTC) 3525:12:50, 23 July 2012 (UTC) 3432:black river - descriptive 3308:07:15, 5 April 2012 (UTC) 3285:14:17, 4 April 2012 (UTC) 2983:Hello. Could you explain 2943:Brackets in European time 2837:200-year Chinese calendar 2622:06:03, 20 June 2011 (UTC) 2592:08:13, 20 June 2011 (UTC) 2574:03:30, 18 June 2011 (UTC) 2559:08:31, 16 June 2011 (UTC) 2476:19:27, 2 April 2020 (UTC) 2461:19:13, 2 April 2020 (UTC) 2424:06:12, 5 April 2011 (UTC) 2214:16:33, 16 July 2010 (UTC) 2203:22:29, 15 July 2010 (UTC) 2187:05:37, 11 July 2010 (UTC) 2149:05:46, 20 June 2010 (UTC) 2096:review other users' edits 905:the then Russian Republic 869:Western European calendar 176:19:46, 10 July 2009 (UTC) 157:17:47, 10 July 2009 (UTC) 124:23:46, 21 June 2009 (UTC) 105:22:05, 21 June 2009 (UTC) 5715:to your user talk page. 5516:to your user talk page. 5145:and continue it there.-- 4411:21:04, 1 July 2015 (UTC) 4162:15:43, 11 May 2015 (UTC) 3800:John Milner Associates, 3499:19:24, 15 May 2012 (UTC) 2708:Calendrical calculations 2255: 2248:Talk:Leap year#Algorithm 2182: 2172:08:59, 8 July 2010 (UTC) 2115:Special:OldReviewedPages 2074:15:10, 26 May 2010 (UTC) 2055:10:13, 20 May 2010 (UTC) 2034:11:43, 11 May 2010 (UTC) 1421: 1365: 1300: 1224: 1036: 989: 804:Knowledge (XXG):Section 792:Knowledge (XXG):Section 779: 753: 739: 673: 596: 353: 233: 171: 119: 86:22:41, 29 May 2009 (UTC) 62:19:56, 23 May 2009 (UTC) 44:19:54, 23 May 2009 (UTC) 4833:Talk:Hijra (South Asia) 4804:20:47, 5 May 2018 (UTC) 4784:Annalium Pars Posterior 4770:01:42, 6 May 2017 (UTC) 4026:the article's talk page 3856:my operator's talk page 3786:my operator's talk page 3478:14:29, 4 May 2012 (UTC) 3243:IERS Reference Meridian 3076:International Date Line 2633:http://thealphabet.info 1719:remainder 19 is taken. 933:Treaty of Brest-Litovsk 863:An early decree of the 507:With reference to this 5302: 4743:Joseph Justus Scaliger 4638: 3982: 2637:NATO phonetic alphabet 2087: 1051: 897: 872: 304: 5676:Arbitration Committee 5660:Hello! Voting in the 5633:John Maynard Friedman 5477:Arbitration Committee 5461:Hello! Voting in the 5374:John Maynard Friedman 5305:Thanks for uploading 5300: 5245:Arbitration Committee 5087:citing Hefele's 1883 4875:Arbitration Committee 4645:, has been listed at 4637: 4582:Arbitration Committee 4555:ArbCom Elections 2016 4506:Arbitration Committee 4479:ArbCom Elections 2016 4437:Arbitration Committee 4248:neutral point of view 4150:Quarter Million Award 4051:articles for deletion 3991:proposed for deletion 3981: 2752:as 新编万年历; 1840~2050年. 2338:Leap second "century" 2086: 1689:Book of Common Prayer 1083:Thanks for editing... 1049: 862: 857: 790:Merge discussion for 465:Talk:Invariable_plane 5602:Opt-out instructions 5560:Opt-out instructions 5430:opt-out instructions 5203:opt-out instructions 4395:No original research 4100:opt-out instructions 3934:opt-out instructions 3846:may have broken the 3776:may have broken the 3697:Sexagesimal notation 3676:User:Jc3s5h/sandbox2 3652:Astronomical Almanac 3620:Astronomical Almanac 3350:opt-out instructions 3273:opt-out instructions 3106:opt-out instructions 2540:Umm al-Qura calendar 1289:University of Leiden 1166:User:Jc3s5h/sandbox4 968:I wrote the article 881:Bolshevik Revolution 5595:fix with Dab solver 5553:fix with Dab solver 5408:fix with Dab solver 5181:fix with Dab solver 4998:Milankovitch cycles 4933:User:Jc3s5h/sandbox 4710:Annals of the World 4441:arbitration process 4355:FWIW: Possibly the 4142:Washington Monument 4078:Washington Monument 3957:Washington Monument 3951:Washington Monument 3912:Washington Monument 3844:Washington Monument 3774:Washington Monument 3714:Positional notation 3332:fix with Dab solver 3255:fix with Dab solver 3088:fix with Dab solver 2830:(1959, 1978, 1984). 1414:Library of Congress 867:, introducing the " 5692:arbitration policy 5493:arbitration policy 5420:• Join us at the 5410:). Such links are 5345:A barnstar for you 5303: 5261:arbitration policy 5193:• Join us at the 5183:). Such links are 4994:apsidal precession 4891:arbitration policy 4639: 4598:arbitration policy 4557:: Voting now open! 4522:arbitration policy 4481:: Voting now open! 4453:arbitration policy 4090:• Join us at the 4043:deletion processes 3983: 3924:• Join us at the 3340:• Join us at the 3263:• Join us at the 3096:• Join us at the 2088: 1438:Gregorian calendar 1160:Request for review 1052: 893:October Revolution 873: 714:Editing talk pages 5731: 5730: 5532: 5531: 5425: 5412:usually incorrect 5387: 5386: 5313:claim of fair use 5198: 5185:usually incorrect 4676:Ussher chronology 4649:. Please see the 4167: 4166: 4095: 3929: 3654:were misleading. 3610: 3593:comment added by 3489:network here...? 3345: 3268: 3101: 2963:comment added by 2242:Moved comment by 2047:Martijn Meijering 1999:comment added by 1981: 1980: 1677: 1676: 1358:Google übersetzer 1144:comment added by 846:Russian Civil War 649:Please contact me 72:Nevermind -- see 5735: 5714: 5657: 5650: 5591:check to confirm 5549:check to confirm 5515: 5458: 5451: 5415: 5404:check to confirm 5396:Axial precession 5356: 5349: 5348: 5299: 5229: 5188: 5177:check to confirm 5112:Scandalous Error 5047: 5031: 4950:Axial precession 4859: 4842: 4836:if you care. — 4566: 4490: 4359:section and the 4128: 4121: 4120: 4085: 4036: 4035: 4019: 4018: 3980: 3919: 3882: 3873: 3859: 3832: 3831: 3805: 3789: 3762: 3761: 3614:Anomalistic year 3609: 3587: 3521: 3514: 3461:Joe, check out: 3335: 3328:check to confirm 3258: 3251:check to confirm 3091: 3084:check to confirm 2975: 2933: 2926: 2908: 2901: 2273:Chinese calendar 2266:Sexagenary cycle 2155:Chinese calendar 2093: 2079:Reviewer granted 2018:Iranian calendar 2008: 1735: 1511:Sunday Letter(s) 1505: 1410:Berne Convention 1285:Internet Archive 1156: 961: 956: 901:Russian Republic 889:Russian Republic 819: 801: 764:Michael C. Price 721:Michael C. Price 710: 655:Chris-do-algarve 639: 637: 635:260° 22' 30" NET 630: 623: 616: 590: 589:10{{smallsup|4}} 570: 568: 566:193° 27' 30" NET 561: 554: 547: 447: 445: 443:322° 55' 15" NET 438: 431: 424: 414: 396: 394: 392:173° 00' 00" NET 387: 380: 373: 337: 335: 333:347° 00' 00" NET 328: 321: 314: 284: 282: 280:347° 30' 00" NET 275: 268: 261: 254: 248: 217: 215: 213:357° 30' 00" NET 208: 201: 194: 5743: 5742: 5738: 5737: 5736: 5734: 5733: 5732: 5708: 5648: 5621: 5579: 5537: 5509: 5449: 5422:DPL WikiProject 5400:Indian calendar 5392: 5368:For making the 5347: 5330:. Thank you. -- 5295: 5290: 5289: 5230: 5222: 5195:DPL WikiProject 5165: 5074: 5045: 5043: 5039: 5035: 5030: 5026: 5022: 5018: 4977:Many thanks. -- 4952: 4925: 4923:"Sidereal time" 4920: 4919: 4860: 4852: 4838: 4820: 4672: 4632: 4627: 4626: 4610:the voting page 4567: 4559: 4551: 4550: 4534:the voting page 4491: 4483: 4461:the voting page 4427: 4183:Shemini Atzeret 4172: 4119: 4092:DPL WikiProject 4074: 4047:speedy deletion 4033: 4032: 4016: 4015: 3978: 3976: 3953: 3926:DPL WikiProject 3908: 3878: 3869: 3838: 3829: 3801: 3768: 3759: 3756: 3699: 3672: 3616: 3588: 3580: 3519: 3512: 3506: 3486: 3459: 3389:Rocky Mountains 3385: 3383:Meridian naming 3342:DPL WikiProject 3316: 3296:datum (geodesy) 3265:DPL WikiProject 3239: 3157:Julian calendar 3150: 3098:DPL WikiProject 3072: 3028: 2981: 2958: 2945: 2931: 2924: 2906: 2899: 2890: 2656: 2629: 2602: 2542: 2508:ASEAN Exchanges 2484: 2399: 2356:manual of style 2342:You reverted a 2340: 2320: 2296: 2294:Latitude thanks 2269: 2240: 2221: 2195: 2159: 2100:two-month trial 2091: 2081: 2062: 2043: 2014: 1994: 1508:Correction date 1462: 1434: 1315: 1185: 1162: 1139: 1122: 1085: 1029:Soviet calendar 970:Soviet calendar 959: 954: 899:If the piping " 834: 817: 795: 731:section editing 716: 700: 689: 686:Dating Creation 651: 633: 626: 619: 612: 610: 588: 564: 557: 550: 543: 541: 537: 505: 461: 441: 434: 427: 420: 418: 390: 383: 376: 369: 367: 331: 324: 317: 310: 308: 296: 278: 271: 264: 257: 255: 252: 246: 211: 204: 197: 190: 188: 184: 132: 93: 70: 28: 12: 11: 5: 5741: 5739: 5729: 5728: 5699:the candidates 5669:eligible users 5658: 5647: 5644: 5620: 5617: 5578: 5575: 5536: 5533: 5530: 5529: 5500:the candidates 5470:eligible users 5459: 5448: 5445: 5391: 5388: 5385: 5384: 5365: 5364: 5359: 5357: 5346: 5343: 5294: 5291: 5268:the candidates 5231: 5224: 5223: 5221: 5218: 5164: 5161: 5160: 5159: 5158: 5157: 5147:SteveMcCluskey 5139: 5127: 5126: 5093:SteveMcCluskey 5073: 5070: 5069: 5068: 5041: 5037: 5033: 5028: 5024: 5020: 5013: 5012: 4963: 4962: 4957: 4951: 4948: 4924: 4921: 4898:the candidates 4861: 4854: 4853: 4851: 4848: 4826:discussion at 4819: 4816: 4815: 4814: 4813: 4812: 4811: 4810: 4809: 4808: 4807: 4806: 4739: 4671: 4668: 4631: 4628: 4568: 4561: 4560: 4558: 4552: 4492: 4485: 4484: 4482: 4476: 4430: 4426: 4421: 4420: 4419: 4418: 4417: 4416: 4415: 4414: 4413: 4380: 4379: 4378: 4377: 4376: 4375: 4353: 4350: 4342: 4341: 4340: 4339: 4333: 4332: 4331: 4330: 4327: 4324: 4321: 4318: 4315: 4312: 4309: 4306: 4303: 4300: 4297: 4294: 4291: 4288: 4285: 4279: 4278: 4262: 4261: 4256: 4255: 4236:WP:SCHOLARSHIP 4216: 4215: 4211: 4210: 4209: 4208: 4196: 4195: 4187: 4171: 4168: 4165: 4164: 4137: 4136: 4131: 4129: 4118: 4115: 4073: 4070: 4057:for deletion. 4037:will stop the 4005: 4004: 3975: 3972: 3952: 3949: 3907: 3904: 3885: 3884: 3875: 3865: 3864: 3808: 3807: 3795: 3794: 3755: 3752: 3751: 3750: 3724:SteveMcCluskey 3698: 3695: 3671: 3668: 3667: 3666: 3632: 3631: 3615: 3612: 3595:Steven L Allen 3579: 3576: 3575: 3574: 3573: 3572: 3558: 3505: 3502: 3485: 3482: 3458: 3455: 3440: 3439: 3433: 3397:Paris Meridian 3384: 3381: 3380: 3379: 3315: 3312: 3311: 3310: 3290:I've relinked 3238: 3235: 3219: 3218: 3203: 3200: 3199: 3198: 3181: 3180: 3149: 3146: 3145: 3144: 3071: 3068: 3067: 3066: 3027: 3024: 3023: 3022: 2980: 2977: 2944: 2941: 2940: 2939: 2889: 2886: 2885: 2884: 2860: 2859: 2858: 2857: 2856: 2855: 2833: 2832: 2831: 2825: 2819: 2813: 2807: 2793: 2792: 2791: 2790: 2773: 2772: 2753: 2741: 2740: 2739: 2738: 2737: 2725: 2724: 2723: 2690: 2689: 2675: 2655: 2652: 2628: 2625: 2601: 2598: 2597: 2596: 2595: 2594: 2577: 2576: 2541: 2538: 2523: 2522: 2483: 2482:Where I should 2480: 2479: 2478: 2463: 2398: 2395: 2394: 2393: 2339: 2336: 2319: 2316: 2305:Peter Mercator 2295: 2292: 2268: 2263: 2239: 2236: 2220: 2217: 2194: 2191: 2190: 2189: 2158: 2152: 2126:BLP violations 2080: 2077: 2066:86.152.101.215 2061: 2058: 2042: 2037: 2013: 2010: 1979: 1978: 1973: 1969: 1968: 1963: 1959: 1958: 1956: 1952: 1951: 1946: 1942: 1941: 1939: 1935: 1934: 1929: 1925: 1924: 1919: 1915: 1914: 1912: 1908: 1907: 1902: 1898: 1897: 1892: 1888: 1887: 1885: 1881: 1880: 1877: 1873: 1872: 1870: 1866: 1865: 1862: 1858: 1857: 1854: 1850: 1849: 1847: 1843: 1842: 1839: 1835: 1834: 1831: 1827: 1826: 1824: 1820: 1819: 1816: 1812: 1811: 1808: 1804: 1803: 1801: 1797: 1796: 1793: 1789: 1788: 1786: 1782: 1781: 1778: 1774: 1773: 1770: 1766: 1765: 1763: 1759: 1758: 1755: 1751: 1750: 1747: 1743: 1742: 1739: 1675: 1674: 1671: 1668: 1665: 1662: 1658: 1657: 1654: 1651: 1648: 1645: 1641: 1640: 1637: 1634: 1631: 1628: 1624: 1623: 1620: 1617: 1614: 1611: 1607: 1606: 1603: 1600: 1597: 1594: 1590: 1589: 1586: 1583: 1580: 1577: 1573: 1572: 1569: 1566: 1563: 1560: 1556: 1555: 1552: 1549: 1546: 1543: 1539: 1538: 1535: 1532: 1529: 1526: 1522: 1521: 1518: 1515: 1512: 1509: 1461: 1458: 1433: 1430: 1429: 1428: 1405: 1404: 1403: 1402: 1373: 1372: 1349: 1348: 1314: 1311: 1310: 1309: 1308: 1307: 1264: 1263: 1232: 1231: 1184: 1181: 1161: 1158: 1146:164.64.120.186 1121: 1118: 1084: 1081: 1080: 1079: 1078: 1077: 1044: 1043: 997: 996: 965: 964: 950: 949: 941: 940: 833: 828: 794: 788: 787: 786: 771: 770: 769: 746: 715: 712: 705:comment added 688: 682: 681: 680: 650: 647: 646: 645: 644: 643: 604: 603: 586:4</sup: --> 536: 533: 504: 501: 460: 457: 456: 455: 454: 453: 452: 451: 403: 402: 401: 400: 361: 360: 295: 292: 291: 290: 289: 288: 241: 240: 183: 180: 179: 178: 131: 128: 127: 126: 92: 91:Greek numerals 89: 78:209.159.37.194 69: 66: 65: 64: 50: 27: 24: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 5740: 5727: 5726: 5722: 5718: 5712: 5706: 5705: 5700: 5695: 5693: 5689: 5685: 5681: 5677: 5671: 5670: 5665: 5664: 5659: 5656: 5652: 5651: 5645: 5643: 5642: 5638: 5634: 5630: 5626: 5618: 5616: 5615: 5611: 5607: 5603: 5598: 5596: 5592: 5588: 5584: 5576: 5574: 5573: 5569: 5565: 5561: 5556: 5554: 5550: 5546: 5542: 5541:Nautical mile 5534: 5528: 5527: 5523: 5519: 5513: 5507: 5506: 5501: 5496: 5494: 5490: 5486: 5482: 5478: 5472: 5471: 5466: 5465: 5460: 5457: 5453: 5452: 5446: 5444: 5443: 5439: 5435: 5431: 5426: 5423: 5419: 5413: 5409: 5405: 5401: 5397: 5389: 5383: 5379: 5375: 5371: 5367: 5366: 5363: 5360: 5355: 5350: 5344: 5342: 5341: 5337: 5333: 5329: 5325: 5320: 5318: 5314: 5310: 5309: 5292: 5288: 5287: 5283: 5279: 5275: 5274: 5269: 5264: 5262: 5258: 5254: 5250: 5246: 5241: 5238: 5237: 5228: 5219: 5217: 5216: 5212: 5208: 5204: 5199: 5196: 5192: 5186: 5182: 5178: 5174: 5170: 5162: 5156: 5152: 5148: 5144: 5143:Talk:Computus 5140: 5136: 5131: 5130: 5129: 5128: 5125: 5121: 5117: 5113: 5109: 5105: 5104: 5103: 5102: 5098: 5094: 5090: 5086: 5082: 5081:your new edit 5077: 5071: 5067: 5063: 5059: 5055: 5051: 5015: 5014: 5011: 5007: 5003: 4999: 4995: 4991: 4990: 4989: 4988: 4984: 4980: 4975: 4972: 4968: 4967: 4960: 4959: 4958: 4955: 4949: 4947: 4946: 4942: 4938: 4934: 4930: 4929:Sidereal time 4922: 4918: 4917: 4913: 4909: 4905: 4904: 4899: 4894: 4892: 4888: 4884: 4880: 4876: 4871: 4868: 4867: 4858: 4849: 4847: 4846: 4843: 4841: 4835: 4834: 4829: 4825: 4817: 4805: 4801: 4797: 4793: 4789: 4785: 4781: 4777: 4773: 4772: 4771: 4767: 4763: 4758: 4757: 4756: 4752: 4748: 4744: 4740: 4737: 4733: 4729: 4728: 4725: 4724: 4723: 4719: 4715: 4711: 4707: 4703: 4700: 4696: 4695: 4694: 4693: 4689: 4685: 4681: 4677: 4669: 4667: 4666: 4662: 4658: 4654: 4653: 4648: 4644: 4636: 4629: 4625: 4624: 4620: 4616: 4612: 4611: 4606: 4601: 4599: 4595: 4591: 4587: 4583: 4578: 4575: 4574: 4565: 4556: 4553: 4549: 4548: 4544: 4540: 4536: 4535: 4530: 4525: 4523: 4519: 4515: 4511: 4507: 4502: 4499: 4498: 4489: 4480: 4477: 4475: 4474: 4470: 4466: 4462: 4458: 4454: 4450: 4446: 4442: 4438: 4434: 4425: 4422: 4412: 4408: 4404: 4400: 4396: 4392: 4388: 4387: 4386: 4385: 4384: 4383: 4382: 4381: 4374: 4370: 4366: 4362: 4358: 4354: 4351: 4348: 4347: 4346: 4345: 4344: 4343: 4337: 4336: 4335: 4334: 4328: 4325: 4322: 4319: 4316: 4313: 4310: 4307: 4304: 4301: 4298: 4295: 4292: 4289: 4286: 4283: 4282: 4281: 4280: 4277: 4273: 4269: 4264: 4263: 4258: 4257: 4253: 4249: 4245: 4241: 4237: 4232: 4231: 4230: 4229: 4225: 4221: 4213: 4212: 4205: 4200: 4199: 4198: 4197: 4193: 4188: 4184: 4180: 4179: 4178: 4175: 4169: 4163: 4159: 4155: 4151: 4147: 4143: 4139: 4138: 4135: 4132: 4127: 4122: 4117:Million award 4116: 4114: 4113: 4109: 4105: 4101: 4096: 4093: 4089: 4083: 4079: 4071: 4069: 4068: 4064: 4060: 4056: 4052: 4048: 4044: 4040: 4029: 4027: 4023: 4012: 4010: 4003: 4001: 3996: 3995: 3994: 3992: 3988: 3973: 3971: 3970: 3966: 3962: 3958: 3950: 3948: 3947: 3943: 3939: 3935: 3930: 3927: 3923: 3917: 3913: 3905: 3903: 3902: 3898: 3894: 3890: 3881: 3876: 3872: 3867: 3866: 3862: 3861: 3860: 3857: 3853: 3852:edit the page 3849: 3845: 3841: 3836: 3826: 3825: 3821: 3817: 3813: 3804: 3797: 3796: 3792: 3791: 3790: 3787: 3783: 3782:edit the page 3779: 3775: 3771: 3766: 3754:December 2014 3753: 3749: 3745: 3741: 3736: 3735: 3734: 3733: 3729: 3725: 3720: 3717: 3715: 3711: 3707: 3702: 3696: 3694: 3693: 3689: 3685: 3681: 3677: 3669: 3665: 3661: 3657: 3653: 3649: 3648: 3647: 3646: 3642: 3638: 3629: 3625: 3624: 3623: 3621: 3613: 3611: 3608: 3604: 3600: 3596: 3592: 3585: 3577: 3571: 3567: 3563: 3559: 3557: 3553: 3549: 3545: 3544:Bad Astronomy 3540: 3539: 3537: 3533: 3529: 3528: 3527: 3526: 3523: 3522: 3517: 3515: 3503: 3501: 3500: 3496: 3492: 3483: 3481: 3479: 3475: 3471: 3467: 3466: 3462: 3456: 3454: 3453: 3449: 3445: 3437: 3434: 3431: 3428: 3427: 3426: 3424: 3420: 3415: 3414: 3410: 3406: 3402: 3398: 3394: 3390: 3382: 3378: 3374: 3370: 3366: 3365: 3364: 3363: 3359: 3355: 3351: 3346: 3343: 3339: 3333: 3329: 3325: 3321: 3313: 3309: 3305: 3301: 3297: 3293: 3289: 3288: 3287: 3286: 3282: 3278: 3274: 3269: 3266: 3262: 3256: 3252: 3248: 3244: 3236: 3234: 3233: 3229: 3225: 3224:Chris Bennett 3217: 3213: 3209: 3204: 3201: 3196: 3195: 3193: 3189: 3188: 3183: 3182: 3177: 3176: 3175: 3174: 3170: 3166: 3165:Chris Bennett 3161: 3158: 3153: 3147: 3143: 3139: 3135: 3131: 3127: 3126:12-hour clock 3122: 3121: 3120: 3119: 3115: 3111: 3107: 3102: 3099: 3095: 3089: 3085: 3081: 3077: 3069: 3065: 3061: 3057: 3053: 3049: 3045: 3044: 3043: 3042: 3038: 3034: 3025: 3021: 3017: 3013: 3009: 3005: 3004: 3003: 3002: 2998: 2994: 2990: 2987:edit? I made 2986: 2978: 2976: 2974: 2970: 2966: 2965:212.57.243.14 2962: 2955: 2951: 2948: 2942: 2938: 2935: 2934: 2929: 2927: 2920: 2919:bautforum.com 2916: 2915: 2914: 2913: 2910: 2909: 2904: 2902: 2895: 2883: 2879: 2875: 2871: 2869: 2866: 2862: 2861: 2854: 2850: 2846: 2842: 2838: 2834: 2829: 2826: 2823: 2820: 2817: 2814: 2811: 2808: 2805: 2802: 2801: 2799: 2798: 2797: 2796: 2795: 2794: 2789: 2785: 2781: 2777: 2776: 2775: 2774: 2771: 2767: 2763: 2758: 2754: 2751: 2747: 2742: 2736: 2733: 2729: 2728: 2726: 2722: 2719: 2715: 2714: 2712: 2711: 2709: 2705: 2701: 2697: 2692: 2691: 2688: 2684: 2680: 2676: 2673: 2672: 2671: 2670: 2666: 2662: 2653: 2651: 2650: 2646: 2642: 2638: 2634: 2626: 2624: 2623: 2619: 2615: 2611: 2607: 2599: 2593: 2589: 2585: 2581: 2580: 2579: 2578: 2575: 2571: 2567: 2563: 2562: 2561: 2560: 2556: 2552: 2546: 2539: 2537: 2536: 2532: 2528: 2521: 2517: 2513: 2509: 2505: 2501: 2500: 2499: 2498: 2494: 2490: 2481: 2477: 2473: 2469: 2464: 2462: 2458: 2454: 2450: 2446: 2442: 2438: 2434: 2433: 2432: 2429: 2426: 2425: 2421: 2417: 2412: 2409: 2406: 2403: 2396: 2392: 2388: 2384: 2380: 2376: 2373: 2372: 2371: 2370: 2366: 2362: 2357: 2353: 2349: 2345: 2337: 2335: 2334: 2330: 2326: 2317: 2315: 2314: 2310: 2306: 2302: 2293: 2291: 2290: 2286: 2282: 2278: 2274: 2267: 2264: 2262: 2261: 2257: 2253: 2249: 2245: 2237: 2235: 2234: 2230: 2226: 2225:71.174.175.19 2218: 2216: 2215: 2211: 2205: 2204: 2200: 2192: 2188: 2184: 2180: 2176: 2175: 2174: 2173: 2169: 2165: 2156: 2153: 2151: 2150: 2146: 2142: 2137: 2135: 2131: 2127: 2123: 2118: 2116: 2112: 2108: 2107:autoconfirmed 2103: 2101: 2097: 2085: 2078: 2076: 2075: 2071: 2067: 2059: 2057: 2056: 2052: 2048: 2041: 2038: 2036: 2035: 2031: 2027: 2023: 2019: 2011: 2009: 2006: 2002: 2001:86.141.134.68 1998: 1993: 1989: 1985: 1984:212.85.12.187 1977: 1974: 1971: 1970: 1967: 1964: 1961: 1960: 1957: 1954: 1953: 1950: 1947: 1944: 1943: 1940: 1937: 1936: 1933: 1930: 1927: 1926: 1923: 1920: 1917: 1916: 1913: 1910: 1909: 1906: 1903: 1900: 1899: 1896: 1893: 1890: 1889: 1886: 1883: 1882: 1878: 1875: 1874: 1871: 1868: 1867: 1863: 1860: 1859: 1855: 1852: 1851: 1848: 1845: 1844: 1840: 1837: 1836: 1832: 1829: 1828: 1825: 1822: 1821: 1817: 1814: 1813: 1809: 1806: 1805: 1802: 1799: 1798: 1794: 1791: 1790: 1787: 1784: 1783: 1779: 1776: 1775: 1771: 1768: 1767: 1764: 1761: 1760: 1756: 1753: 1752: 1748: 1745: 1744: 1740: 1737: 1736: 1733: 1731: 1727: 1724: 1720: 1716: 1712: 1708: 1704: 1700: 1696: 1694: 1690: 1685: 1681: 1672: 1669: 1666: 1663: 1660: 1659: 1655: 1652: 1649: 1646: 1643: 1642: 1638: 1635: 1632: 1629: 1626: 1625: 1621: 1618: 1615: 1612: 1609: 1608: 1604: 1601: 1598: 1595: 1592: 1591: 1587: 1584: 1581: 1578: 1575: 1574: 1570: 1567: 1564: 1561: 1558: 1557: 1553: 1550: 1547: 1544: 1541: 1540: 1536: 1533: 1530: 1527: 1524: 1523: 1519: 1516: 1513: 1510: 1507: 1506: 1503: 1500: 1496: 1493: 1491: 1487: 1485: 1481: 1477: 1473: 1469: 1467: 1459: 1457: 1456: 1452: 1448: 1443: 1439: 1431: 1427: 1423: 1419: 1415: 1411: 1407: 1406: 1401: 1397: 1393: 1389: 1388:Non-exclusive 1385: 1384:non-exclusive 1381: 1377: 1376: 1375: 1374: 1371: 1367: 1363: 1359: 1355: 1351: 1350: 1346: 1342: 1341: 1340: 1339: 1335: 1331: 1327: 1322: 1318: 1312: 1306: 1302: 1298: 1294: 1290: 1286: 1282: 1281:Talk:Computus 1278: 1277: 1272: 1268: 1267: 1266: 1265: 1262: 1258: 1254: 1249: 1248: 1247: 1246: 1242: 1238: 1230: 1226: 1222: 1217: 1213: 1210: 1206: 1205: 1204: 1203: 1199: 1195: 1189: 1182: 1180: 1179: 1175: 1171: 1167: 1159: 1157: 1155: 1151: 1147: 1143: 1136: 1135: 1131: 1127: 1119: 1117: 1115: 1111: 1107: 1101: 1099: 1095: 1091: 1082: 1076: 1072: 1068: 1064: 1060: 1056: 1055: 1054: 1053: 1048: 1042: 1038: 1034: 1030: 1026: 1025: 1024: 1023: 1019: 1015: 1011: 1006: 1002: 995: 991: 987: 983: 979: 975: 971: 967: 966: 952: 951: 947: 943: 942: 938: 934: 930: 926: 921: 920: 919: 918: 914: 910: 906: 902: 896: 894: 890: 887:of the then " 886: 882: 878: 870: 866: 861: 856: 853: 851: 847: 841: 837: 832: 829: 827: 826: 823: 821: 820: 813: 809: 805: 800: 793: 789: 785: 781: 777: 772: 768: 765: 761: 760: 759: 755: 751: 747: 745: 741: 737: 732: 728: 727: 726: 725: 722: 713: 711: 708: 704: 698: 694: 693:76.244.59.146 687: 683: 679: 675: 671: 667: 666: 665: 664: 660: 656: 648: 642: 638: 636: 631: 629: 624: 622: 617: 615: 608: 607: 606: 605: 602: 598: 594: 584: 580: 576: 575: 574: 573: 569: 567: 562: 560: 555: 553: 548: 546: 534: 532: 531: 527: 523: 518: 514: 510: 503:Nautical time 502: 500: 499: 495: 491: 486: 484: 479: 477: 472: 470: 466: 458: 450: 446: 444: 439: 437: 432: 430: 425: 423: 417: 413: 409: 408: 407: 406: 405: 404: 399: 395: 393: 388: 386: 381: 379: 374: 372: 365: 364: 363: 362: 359: 355: 351: 347: 343: 342: 341: 340: 336: 334: 329: 327: 322: 320: 315: 313: 303: 299: 293: 287: 283: 281: 276: 274: 269: 267: 262: 260: 251: 245: 244: 243: 242: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 222: 221: 220: 216: 214: 209: 207: 202: 200: 195: 193: 181: 177: 173: 169: 165: 161: 160: 159: 158: 154: 150: 147: 143: 140: 136: 129: 125: 121: 117: 113: 109: 108: 107: 106: 102: 98: 90: 88: 87: 83: 79: 75: 67: 63: 59: 55: 51: 48: 47: 46: 45: 41: 37: 33: 25: 23: 22: 18: 5702: 5696: 5673: 5667: 5661: 5622: 5599: 5580: 5557: 5538: 5503: 5497: 5474: 5468: 5462: 5427: 5393: 5361: 5323: 5321: 5306: 5304: 5271: 5265: 5242: 5234: 5232: 5200: 5166: 5134: 5119: 5111: 5107: 5088: 5078: 5075: 5061: 5005: 4976: 4973: 4969: 4964: 4956: 4953: 4926: 4901: 4895: 4872: 4864: 4862: 4839: 4831: 4824:move request 4821: 4799: 4791: 4787: 4750: 4717: 4679: 4673: 4651: 4640: 4608: 4602: 4579: 4571: 4569: 4532: 4526: 4503: 4495: 4493: 4428: 4406: 4360: 4356: 4271: 4217: 4203: 4191: 4176: 4173: 4146:Good Article 4133: 4097: 4075: 4041:, but other 4030: 4022:edit summary 4013: 4006: 3997: 3985:The article 3984: 3954: 3931: 3909: 3886: 3879: 3870: 3827: 3809: 3802: 3757: 3743: 3721: 3718: 3703: 3700: 3673: 3670:Year lengths 3651: 3633: 3627: 3619: 3617: 3589:— Preceding 3581: 3565: 3551: 3543: 3510: 3507: 3487: 3480:Senor Cuete 3468: 3463: 3460: 3441: 3429: 3416: 3391:and Pole in 3386: 3372: 3347: 3324:Eccentricity 3317: 3303: 3270: 3240: 3220: 3211: 3186: 3162: 3154: 3151: 3137: 3103: 3073: 3059: 3029: 3015: 2993:71.146.20.62 2982: 2959:— Preceding 2956: 2952: 2949: 2946: 2922: 2897: 2891: 2877: 2864: 2848: 2840: 2836: 2827: 2821: 2815: 2809: 2803: 2780:Stone-turner 2765: 2756: 2745: 2731: 2717: 2707: 2699: 2695: 2661:Stone-turner 2657: 2630: 2617: 2603: 2569: 2547: 2543: 2524: 2515: 2485: 2471: 2456: 2441:scare quotes 2430: 2427: 2416:TWCAdirector 2413: 2410: 2407: 2404: 2400: 2386: 2378: 2341: 2321: 2297: 2270: 2241: 2222: 2206: 2196: 2160: 2138: 2119: 2104: 2089: 2063: 2044: 2015: 1982: 1975: 1965: 1948: 1931: 1921: 1904: 1894: 1729: 1728: 1725: 1721: 1717: 1713: 1709: 1705: 1701: 1697: 1688: 1686: 1682: 1678: 1501: 1497: 1494: 1489: 1488: 1483: 1479: 1478: 1474: 1470: 1463: 1442:New Calendar 1435: 1387: 1383: 1323: 1319: 1316: 1274: 1233: 1208:books site, 1190: 1186: 1163: 1137: 1123: 1116:Senor Cuete 1102: 1100:Senor Cuete 1086: 1062: 1009: 1004: 998: 898: 874: 854: 842: 838: 835: 816: 796: 717: 690: 652: 634: 627: 620: 613: 565: 558: 551: 544: 538: 506: 487: 480: 473: 462: 442: 435: 428: 421: 415: 391: 384: 377: 370: 332: 325: 318: 311: 305: 301: 297: 279: 272: 265: 258: 224:Answered at 212: 205: 198: 191: 185: 162:Answered at 144: 141: 137: 133: 110:Answered at 94: 71: 39: 29: 26:Decimal time 15: 5704:voting page 5505:voting page 5273:voting page 5054:Laskar 2004 5050:Laskar 1993 4979:Pediatriste 4903:voting page 4828:Talk:Hegira 4792:Whole Works 4776:archive.org 3833:Hello, I'm 3763:Hello, I'm 3706:sexagesimal 3470:Senor Cuete 3436:Black River 3423:Black River 3421:or several 3419:George Rose 2841:Wannian Shu 2757:Wannian Shu 2730:published: 2716:published: 2641:94.2.72.164 2604:Comment by 2504:Roche limit 2348:Leap second 2210:Samhastings 2199:Samhastings 1995:—Preceding 1140:—Preceding 1106:Senor Cuete 1090:Senor Cuete 963:celebrated. 871:" in Russia 701:—Preceding 684:Thank you! 97:Languagehat 5688:topic bans 5489:topic bans 5432:. Thanks, 5416:(Read the 5257:topic bans 5205:. Thanks, 5189:(Read the 4887:topic bans 4702:microfiche 4652:discussion 4594:topic bans 4518:topic bans 4449:topic bans 4361:Four gates 4192:Four Gates 4170:Four Gates 4102:. Thanks, 3961:Epicgenius 3936:. Thanks, 3893:BracketBot 3891:. Thanks, 3835:BracketBot 3816:BracketBot 3814:. Thanks, 3765:BracketBot 3393:South Pole 3352:. Thanks, 3320:Precession 3275:. Thanks, 3192:Undecimber 3163:Thanks -- 3152:Hi Joe -- 3108:. Thanks, 3033:LenderCarl 2606:Edeshields 2346:I made to 2325:LenderCarl 2141:Courcelles 1330:LenderCarl 1126:Dougweller 1005:hypothesis 628:Seven Seas 559:Seven Seas 436:Seven Seas 385:Seven Seas 326:Seven Seas 273:Seven Seas 206:Seven Seas 5684:site bans 5485:site bans 5253:site bans 5116:Joe Kress 5058:Joe Kress 5032:; where s 5002:Joe Kress 4883:site bans 4840:AjaxSmack 4796:Joe Kress 4747:Joe Kress 4714:Joe Kress 4590:site bans 4514:site bans 4445:site bans 4403:Joe Kress 4365:StevenJ81 4268:Joe Kress 4240:WP:NONENG 4220:StevenJ81 4154:Bobnorwal 4086:Read the 4055:consensus 3989:has been 3920:Read the 3840:your edit 3770:your edit 3740:Joe Kress 3722:Thanks -- 3562:Joe Kress 3548:Joe Kress 3369:Joe Kress 3336:Read the 3300:Joe Kress 3259:Read the 3208:Joe Kress 3179:Commodus. 3134:Joe Kress 3092:Read the 3056:Joe Kress 3012:Joe Kress 3008:Year zero 2979:Year zero 2874:Joe Kress 2845:Joe Kress 2762:Joe Kress 2614:Joe Kress 2608:moved to 2584:AstroLynx 2566:Joe Kress 2551:AstroLynx 2512:Joe Kress 2468:Joe Kress 2453:Joe Kress 2383:Joe Kress 2252:Joe Kress 2238:Leap year 2179:Joe Kress 2122:vandalism 1684:reverse. 1418:Joe Kress 1362:Joe Kress 1297:Joe Kress 1237:Terry0051 1221:Joe Kress 1194:Terry0051 1033:Joe Kress 986:Joe Kress 974:Arhivarij 776:Joe Kress 750:Joe Kress 736:Joe Kress 670:Joe Kress 593:Joe Kress 579:WP:PIPING 490:Terry0051 350:Joe Kress 294:Break Tag 230:Joe Kress 168:Joe Kress 116:Joe Kress 36:Joe Kress 5625:Computus 5370:Computus 5324:articles 5135:whatever 5085:Computus 4399:WP: CALC 4000:WP:2DABS 3603:contribs 3591:unsigned 3444:HTML2011 3405:HTML2011 2961:unsigned 2600:CE Score 2582:Thanks! 2414:Thanks, 2164:Barefact 2092:reviewer 1997:unsigned 1972:April 27 1962:April 26 1955:April 25 1945:April 24 1938:April 23 1928:April 22 1918:April 21 1911:April 20 1901:April 19 1891:April 18 1884:April 17 1876:April 16 1869:April 15 1861:April 14 1853:April 13 1846:April 12 1838:April 11 1830:April 10 1754:March 31 1746:March 30 1142:unsigned 614:Set Sail 545:Set Sail 535:10s link 513:RadioFan 422:Set Sail 371:Set Sail 312:Set Sail 259:Set Sail 192:Set Sail 54:CmdrObot 52:Cheers, 5711:NoACEMM 5606:DPL bot 5564:DPL bot 5512:NoACEMM 5434:DPL bot 5207:DPL bot 4539:Mdann52 4104:DPL bot 3938:DPL bot 3710:rewrite 3513:Serendi 3354:DPL bot 3277:DPL bot 3110:DPL bot 2925:Serendi 2900:Serendi 2818:(1979). 2812:(1959). 2806:(1986). 1823:April 9 1815:April 8 1807:April 7 1800:April 6 1792:April 5 1785:April 4 1777:April 3 1769:April 2 1762:April 1 1741:Number 1520:Cypher 1192:vol.6? 1067:Vmenkov 1014:Vmenkov 1010:assumed 929:Ukraine 925:Belarus 909:Vmenkov 703:undated 621:For The 552:For The 517:message 429:For The 378:For The 319:For The 266:For The 199:For The 149:Oriel36 5545:League 5173:Staple 5079:I saw 5046:2p – f 4937:Jc3s5h 4762:Alephb 4699:Readex 4684:Alephb 4670:Ussher 4435:. The 4244:Talmud 4207:days.) 4059:Boleyn 4024:or on 3848:syntax 3778:syntax 3684:Jc3s5h 3656:Jc3s5h 3637:Jc3s5h 3491:Tfr000 2527:Gsarwa 2489:Gsarwa 2377:under 2344:change 2281:LC.Lau 2277:Lichun 2244:hydrox 2026:Ariana 1490:Step 2 1484:unless 1480:Step 1 1447:Jc3s5h 1392:Jc3s5h 1253:Jc3s5h 1170:Jc3s5h 1120:Thanks 1063:unpaid 877:Russia 250:notice 5604:.) -- 5562:.) -- 5332:B-bot 5114:). — 5019:f = s 4204:think 4082:Knoll 3916:Mason 3701:Joe, 3292:datum 3247:Datum 3130:AM/PM 2732:Orion 2718:Orion 2696:Orion 2487:much. 2361:Bazza 1703:Day. 960:5 May 955:1 May 836:Joe, 808:merge 522:Dpmuk 416:Fixed 5721:talk 5674:The 5637:talk 5610:talk 5597:). 5587:None 5568:talk 5555:). 5522:talk 5475:The 5438:talk 5378:talk 5336:talk 5282:talk 5243:The 5211:talk 5151:talk 5120:talk 5097:talk 5076:Joe 5062:talk 5052:and 5006:talk 5000:. — 4996:and 4983:talk 4941:talk 4912:talk 4873:The 4800:talk 4794:. — 4782:and 4766:talk 4751:talk 4718:talk 4712:. — 4688:talk 4661:talk 4657:Whpq 4619:talk 4580:The 4543:talk 4504:The 4469:talk 4407:talk 4369:talk 4272:talk 4224:talk 4158:talk 4108:talk 4063:talk 3998:Per 3965:talk 3942:talk 3897:talk 3820:talk 3744:talk 3728:talk 3688:talk 3680:Year 3660:talk 3641:talk 3599:talk 3566:talk 3552:talk 3504:Vega 3495:talk 3474:talk 3448:talk 3409:talk 3373:talk 3358:talk 3304:talk 3298:. — 3281:talk 3228:talk 3212:talk 3169:talk 3138:talk 3132:. — 3114:talk 3060:talk 3054:. — 3037:talk 3016:talk 2997:talk 2989:this 2985:this 2969:talk 2892:re: 2878:talk 2872:. — 2849:talk 2784:talk 2766:talk 2683:talk 2679:Karl 2665:talk 2645:talk 2618:talk 2612:. — 2588:talk 2570:talk 2555:talk 2531:talk 2516:talk 2493:talk 2472:talk 2457:talk 2435:See 2420:talk 2387:talk 2365:talk 2329:talk 2309:talk 2285:talk 2279:. -- 2256:talk 2250:. — 2229:talk 2183:talk 2168:talk 2145:talk 2134:here 2070:talk 2051:talk 2030:talk 2005:talk 1988:talk 1738:Date 1661:2400 1644:2300 1627:2200 1610:2100 1593:2000 1576:1900 1559:1800 1542:1700 1525:1600 1451:talk 1422:talk 1396:talk 1366:talk 1360:. — 1334:talk 1301:talk 1291:and 1257:talk 1241:talk 1225:talk 1211:and 1198:talk 1174:talk 1150:talk 1130:talk 1110:talk 1094:talk 1071:talk 1037:talk 1018:talk 990:talk 927:and 913:talk 818:imis 812:here 780:talk 754:talk 740:talk 697:talk 674:talk 659:talk 597:talk 526:talk 509:edit 494:talk 354:talk 348:. — 234:talk 228:. — 172:talk 166:. — 153:talk 120:talk 114:. — 101:talk 82:talk 58:talk 40:talk 5418:FAQ 5319:). 5191:FAQ 5083:to 5027:+ g 5023:– g 4736:FAQ 4429:Hi, 4088:FAQ 3922:FAQ 3842:to 3772:to 3520:ous 3338:FAQ 3294:to 3261:FAQ 3094:FAQ 2932:ous 2907:ous 2635:in 2299:at 2246:to 2193:RfA 2124:or 1856:12 1833:15 1810:18 1795:10 1772:13 1749:16 1732:. 1673:+4 1656:+4 1639:+3 1622:+2 1605:+2 1588:+2 1571:+1 1554:+1 1517:LUN 1514:SOL 875:In 699:) 5723:) 5713:}} 5709:{{ 5686:, 5639:) 5612:) 5593:| 5570:) 5551:| 5524:) 5514:}} 5510:{{ 5487:, 5440:) 5424:.) 5406:| 5380:) 5338:) 5284:) 5276:. 5255:, 5213:) 5197:.) 5179:| 5153:) 5122:) 5099:) 5064:) 5008:) 4985:) 4943:) 4914:) 4906:. 4885:, 4802:) 4768:) 4753:) 4720:) 4690:) 4663:) 4621:) 4613:. 4592:, 4545:) 4537:. 4516:, 4471:) 4447:, 4409:) 4371:) 4274:) 4226:) 4160:) 4110:) 4065:) 4028:. 4011:. 3967:) 3944:) 3899:) 3822:) 3746:) 3730:) 3690:) 3662:) 3643:) 3605:) 3601:• 3568:) 3554:) 3497:) 3476:) 3450:) 3411:) 3403:. 3375:) 3360:) 3330:| 3306:) 3283:) 3253:| 3230:) 3214:) 3171:) 3140:) 3116:) 3086:| 3080:PM 3062:) 3039:) 3018:) 2999:) 2971:) 2880:) 2851:) 2786:) 2768:) 2706:. 2685:) 2667:) 2647:) 2620:) 2590:) 2572:) 2557:) 2533:) 2518:) 2495:) 2474:) 2459:) 2422:) 2389:) 2367:) 2352:cy 2331:) 2311:) 2287:) 2258:) 2231:) 2219:60 2212:) 2201:) 2185:) 2170:) 2147:) 2136:. 2117:. 2072:) 2053:) 2032:) 2007:) 1990:) 1966:19 1949:11 1922:14 1895:17 1879:9 1864:1 1841:4 1818:7 1780:2 1757:5 1670:-3 1667:+7 1653:-2 1650:+6 1636:-2 1633:+5 1619:-2 1616:+4 1602:-1 1599:+3 1596:BA 1585:-1 1582:+3 1568:-1 1565:+2 1548:+1 1537:0 1528:BA 1453:) 1424:) 1398:) 1368:) 1336:) 1303:) 1259:) 1243:) 1227:) 1200:) 1176:) 1152:) 1132:) 1112:) 1096:) 1073:) 1039:) 1020:) 992:) 915:) 782:) 756:) 742:) 719:-- 676:) 661:) 599:) 583:10 528:) 496:) 485:. 356:) 253:}} 247:{{ 236:) 174:) 155:) 122:) 103:) 84:) 76:. 60:) 42:) 5719:( 5635:( 5608:( 5600:( 5589:( 5583:0 5566:( 5558:( 5547:( 5520:( 5436:( 5402:( 5376:( 5334:( 5301:⚠ 5280:( 5209:( 5175:( 5149:( 5118:( 5095:( 5060:( 5042:5 5038:6 5034:6 5029:5 5025:6 5021:6 5004:( 4981:( 4939:( 4910:( 4798:( 4764:( 4749:( 4716:( 4686:( 4659:( 4617:( 4541:( 4467:( 4405:( 4367:( 4270:( 4222:( 4156:( 4106:( 4094:. 4061:( 3963:( 3940:( 3928:. 3895:( 3880:[ 3871:{ 3858:. 3818:( 3803:[ 3788:. 3742:( 3726:( 3686:( 3658:( 3639:( 3597:( 3564:( 3550:( 3493:( 3472:( 3446:( 3430:a 3407:( 3371:( 3356:( 3344:. 3326:( 3302:( 3279:( 3267:. 3249:( 3226:( 3210:( 3167:( 3136:( 3112:( 3100:. 3082:( 3058:( 3035:( 3014:( 2995:( 2967:( 2876:( 2847:( 2782:( 2764:( 2681:( 2663:( 2643:( 2616:( 2586:( 2568:( 2553:( 2529:( 2514:( 2491:( 2470:( 2455:( 2418:( 2385:( 2363:( 2327:( 2307:( 2283:( 2254:( 2227:( 2208:( 2181:( 2166:( 2143:( 2068:( 2049:( 2028:( 2003:( 1986:( 1976:8 1932:3 1905:6 1664:B 1647:G 1630:E 1613:C 1579:G 1562:E 1551:0 1545:C 1534:0 1531:0 1449:( 1420:( 1394:( 1364:( 1332:( 1299:( 1255:( 1239:( 1223:( 1196:( 1172:( 1148:( 1128:( 1108:( 1092:( 1069:( 1035:( 1016:( 988:( 911:( 778:( 752:( 738:( 709:. 695:( 672:( 657:( 595:( 524:( 492:( 352:( 232:( 170:( 151:( 118:( 99:( 80:( 56:( 38:(

Index

/Archive 2004/03/23–2006/10/08
/Archive 2006/10/15–2009/04/20
Decimal time#Decimal times in fiction
Joe Kress
talk
19:54, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
CmdrObot
talk
19:56, 23 May 2009 (UTC)
Talk:NATO phonetic alphabet#Charlie Racist and the "Growing Movement"
209.159.37.194
talk
22:41, 29 May 2009 (UTC)
Languagehat
talk
22:05, 21 June 2009 (UTC)
Talk:Greek numerals#Alternate name ref
Joe Kress
talk
23:46, 21 June 2009 (UTC)
http://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Earth%27s_rotation
Oriel36
talk
17:47, 10 July 2009 (UTC)
Talk:Earth's rotation#Earth's rotation in 24 hours
Joe Kress
talk
19:46, 10 July 2009 (UTC)
Set Sail
For The

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.