A calendar year means from January 1 through December 31. Sometimes employment benefits are based on calendar years, for instance you might be eligible to participate in a retirement plan in your third calendar year. If you started the job in 2008, it doesn't matter if you started in January, December, or somewhere between, 2008 is your first calendar year of employment, 2009 is your second, and you can join the plan on January 1, 2010, which is the beginning of your third year.
You can get calendar for any year including 2008 calendar and in any format from calendarlabs.com.
2008
You can generate calendar for any month and year at calendarlabs.com. Go to online calendar tool and fill in your month and year.
According to the Chinese calendar, 2008 was the year of the rat.
2036, 2064, 2092.
The year 2008 will repeat again in 2036, as 2008 was a leap year. During the 21st century it will repeat again in 2064 and again in 2092.
No. The most immediately obvious reason is that 2008 is a leap year and 2014 is not.
year of the ox can't you just google it
2008 is a leap year and 2013 is not.
2008 was a leap year. Every leap year of the Gregorian calendar is 52 weeks and two days long. 2008 consisted of 51 full calendar weeks with five days before the first full week and four days after the last full week.
2008 was a leap year starting on Tuesday. The next time such a calendar can be used again is in 2036.
[1] 2008 was the year of the rat in the Chinese calendar. [2] The ox takes over, on January 26th, as the Chinese animal of the year, in 2009.