What is the calendar, and why is it called calendar?
The calendar is a year view calendar with 81 days separated by months and 143 days for each column. Each month has seven columns corresponding to days of the week. I’m looking for an adjective. This is an _____ calendar.
Can someone tell me my story? (ie in spanish).
Do all twelve months of one page calendars work? One website calls it a yearly calendar, whereas a calendar divided into months is called a monthly calendar. The official dates are 13, 15, and 24 of 2019 and have been revised. There is also a 3 years calendar. I just double checked and Google retrieves 494,000 results for “yearly calendar”.
I think you hit it with the “year view” though I would hyphenate it
thus: This is a year-view calendar.
What is the point of asking “what is the point of asking?” “, I would like James probably reply “it’s a calendar”, but I would say the same if you showed me a month-view calendar., I just want to tell you which calendars cover a MONTH. Is it important?
Do you have a planner that has space to draw and write a report or a larger year-view? But I have no idea of how your illustration works.
Possibly the terms (something)-view have become more common because of their use in software like Outlook, where you may have a selector like: View:
day / week / month.
Do all twelve months of one page calendars work? One website calls it a yearly calendar, whereas a calendar divided into months is called a monthly calendar. The official dates are 13, 15, and 24 of 2019 and have been revised. There is also a 3 years calendar. I just double checked and Google retrieves 494,000 results for “yearly calendar”.
Do all twelve months of one page calendars work? One website calls it a yearly calendar, whereas a calendar divided into months is called a monthly calendar. The official dates are 13, 15, and 24 of 2019 and have been revised. There is also a 3 years calendar. I just double checked and Google retrieves 494,000 results for “yearly calendar”.
I think you hit it with the “year view” though I would hyphenate it
thus: This is a year-view calendar.
What is the point of asking “what is the point of asking?” “, I would like James probably reply “it’s a calendar”, but I would say the same if you showed me a month-view calendar., I just want to tell you which calendars cover a MONTH. Is it important?
Do you have a planner that has space to draw and write a report or a larger year-view? But I have no idea of how your illustration works.
Possibly the terms (something)-view have become more common because of their use in software like Outlook, where you may have a selector like: View:
day / week / month.
I call it a “Calendar, but you could call it a single page calendar.” “I
don’t know what I’m making for myself. I would be worried.
I call it a “Calendar, but you could call it a single page calendar.” “I
don’t know what I’m making for myself. I would be worried.
I think you hit it with the “year view” though I would hyphenate it
thus: This is a year-view calendar.
What is the point of asking “what is the point of asking?” “, I would like James probably reply “it’s a calendar”, but I would say the same if you showed me a month-view calendar., I just want to tell you which calendars cover a MONTH. Is it important?
Do you have a planner that has space to draw and write a report or a larger year-view? But I have no idea of how your illustration works.
Possibly the terms (something)-view have become more common because of their use in software like Outlook, where you may have a selector like: View:
day / week / month.