Naeng/Calendar and time

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The Bjeheondians usually use the modern Trician solar calendar. The Mărotłite lunisolar calendar is used for getting the dates of Mărotłism-derived holidays.

Mărotłite calendar

The Mărotłite calendar is a lunisolar calendar.

One Trician solar year is about 357.08065278709064 Trician days, and one Trician lunar month is about 30.58122882574347 Trician days long; hence months in the lunar calendar usually have either 30 or 31 days. Twelve lunar months are about 366.97474590892164 days, which exceeds the solar year by 9.89409312183100 solar days. Hence in a regular 25-year cycle, one of the months, Tslüüs II, placed right before summer solstice, is omitted or reduced to a half-month.

The twelve lunar months are:

  • Mingiiφ (30 days) ~ summer solstice
  • Blesi (30 days) ~ beginning of autumn
  • Θmuuχ (30 days)
  • Căφlan (30 days) ~ autumn equinox, harvest season
  • Stansa (30 days) ~ beginning of winter
  • Șĭdaφ (31 days)
  • Bĭnur (31 days) ~ winter solstice
  • Tănot (31 days)
  • Noman (31 days) ~ beginning of spring
  • Slăsyan (31 days) ~ spring equinox, ~ planting season
  • Tslüüs I (31 days) ~ beginning of summer
  • Tslüüs II (31 days; omitted in years 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21 mod 25. These years are called imtsuar șănărhip, lit. 'defective years'.)