366 days

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Noun1.366 days - in the Gregorian calendar: any year divisible by 4 except centenary years divisible by 400366 days - in the Gregorian calendar: any year divisible by 4 except centenary years divisible by 400
twelvemonth, year, yr - a period of time containing 365 (or 366) days; "she is 4 years old"; "in the year 1920"
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References in periodicals archive
That is because laws at the time prevented prosecution over a death more than 366 days after injuries were sustained.
The federal government has designed tax laws to encourage long-term investment in companies (a stock becomes a long-term holding when it is held for 366 days).
Kelly Ann Hay, 28, was handed a total of 366 days in prison after admitting stealing items from a jeweller's and carrying out thefts on a bus travelling through Paisley.
He was jailed for 366 days in 1987 over a [pounds sterling]3million tax fraud, and as a result was tripped of the OBE he had been awarded in 1975.
'A year after that day of quiet, private prayer with a REAL FRIEND, let where I am 366 days after be proof that we just need to have enough FAITH to let go [and] let God,' Aquino recalled.
The bill also requires the banks to calculate interest rates at 365 days or 366 days in a leap year and not at 360 days, which is the current practice.
2016 is a Leap Year, which means we have 366 days instead of the usual 365.
On August 6, 2015, President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi officially opened the New Suez Canal, just 366 days after launching the Suez Canal Area Development project.
(Lil' Kim was sentenced to 366 days in prison; she served nearly 10 months.)
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