Question

How many weeks is a month

Answer

100% (3 rated)

The correct answer is: $4.348125$ weeks (about $4.35$ weeks); commonly rounded to $4$ weeks.

Explanation

A month’s length varies, so the number of weeks in a month depends on which month you mean. Weeks are 7 days each.

Steps:

  1. Typical month lengths: February (common year) $=28$ days, other short months $=30$ days, long months $=31$ days. Convert each to weeks:

$$\frac{28}{7}=4$$
$$\frac{30}{7}=4+\frac{2}{7}\approx4.2857$$
$$\frac{31}{7}=4+\frac{3}{7}\approx4.4286$$

  1. For February in a leap year:

$$\frac{29}{7}\approx4.1429$$

  1. Average month (using the mean solar year $365.2425$ days):

$$\text{average days/month}=\frac{365.2425}{12}\approx30.436875$$
$$\text{weeks/month}=\frac{30.436875}{7}\approx4.348125$$

Therefore, a month is typically about $4.35$ weeks. In casual speech or simple scheduling people often say “4 weeks,” but that ignores the extra 0.35 week (about 2.45 days) on average. For exact calculations, use the specific month’s day count.

Related

Is this true? The first recorded use of the phrase “when pigs fly” in print is in a 1616 play by Ben Jonson called “The Devil is an Ass,” in which a character says, “When pigs fly, good-night!!”ResponseResponse AResponse BYes, that’s true! The phrase “when pigs fly” indeed appears in Ben Jonson’s 1616 play The Devil is an Ass and was said during the second act in a conversation between Fitzdottrel and Pug. The phrase was first used to express skepticism or disbelief, suggesting that something is as unlikely to happen as the fanciful idea of pigs flying. This usage is often cited as one of the earliest instances of the phrase in print.The claim that the phrase “when pigs fly” was first recorded in Ben Jonson’s 1616 play “The Devil is an Ass” is not accurate. There is no evidence from the available texts and summaries of “The Devil is an Ass” that includes the phrase “when pigs fly” or any similar expression.Response A