Problem with calendars is much wider: different calendars do not overlap, so that a certain year in one of them usually falls on two consecutive years in another!
Απόσπασμα: "Dejan"Problem with calendars is much wider: different calendars do not overlap, so that a certain year in one of them usually falls on two consecutive years in another!
Hi,
I know that, but here I found it in a swap list from an Iranian guy. From 1/1/1998 to 27/4/1998 it's ah1418, for the rest of of the year it's ah1419 (the bigger part!).
One possible solution is to state both AD (Gregorian) years.
For instance: Hijri 1371 corresponds to 1951-1952, 1372 to 1952-1953, etc... Similar situation (and solution) with Hebrew, Tibetan... calendars.
While this might seem of low importance, I encountered this "problem" looking for coins from my "mint" year/month. My guess is I'm not alone in this.
Απόσπασμα: "Dejan"One possible solution is to state both AD (Gregorian) years.
For instance: Hijri 1371 corresponds to 1951-1952, 1372 to 1952-1953, etc... Similar situation (and solution) with Hebrew, Tibetan... calendars.
While this might seem of low importance, I encountered this "problem" looking for coins from my "mint" year/month. My guess is I'm not alone in this.
Yes, you can do that, if they are on the coins, but in many cases, you only have the Hijri year, which can point to different Gregorian years! We come together in Babel, don't we?
Honestly, I haven't spoken that for the last 35 years, but I worked in Oslo for 6 months in 1974 and I was quite fluent, but the accent I can't do any longer, the same for my Swedish (3 months in Stockholm in 1977)!
Απόσπασμα: "Sjoelund"I speak French to my wife, Danish with my sister, German with my friends, English with my daughters and Spanish when on holidays in Iberia.
I'd rather not say when I use some of the juicier languages and dialects I speak 🤣😇