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i. e. does 12:00 AM complete the 12-hour PM-cycle or start the next day AM cycle? If 11:5999999999999999 PM is still Friday, is exactly 12:00 AM the end of that cycle (and part of it) or the beginning of the Saturday cycle? Does 'both' settle the argument?

2007-12-21 04:56:36 · 5 answers · asked by te144 7 in Science & Mathematics Weather

Or, who gives a ....

2007-12-21 05:02:28 · update #1

5 answers

midnight is 0000h

so presumably it belongs to the day that contains 0001h

in other words the next day

2007-12-21 04:59:59 · answer #1 · answered by rosie recipe 7 · 0 0

There really is no answer.At 12:00 noon is it the ending of the morning cycle or the starting of the noon cycle?I just call it midnight and noon so I don't get confused because really you can't say it's 12:00 p.m until we acutually prove it.Really it's just 00:00 because it does not have a certain day.Friday ends at 11:59 pm and Saturday starts at 1:00 am.So understanding midnight 12:00 and noon 12:00 can't exist for if it did as we think then it would be both days or in noons case both parts of the day.So I'm down to 2 answers for the question:
1.Midnight is really both days.
2.Midnight doesn't exist.
There you go. Happy!Now my brain is all confused!Ugh!!!

1.Midnight

2007-12-21 18:54:29 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

12:00 AM midnight is considered as 0:00 the next day. 24 hour digital clocks never show 24:00:00, they go directly from 23:59:59 to 0:00:00 and if they are calendar clocks the date changes when it goes to 0:00:00.

2007-12-21 13:01:19 · answer #3 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 2 0

12:00 AM is today.

2007-12-21 13:00:35 · answer #4 · answered by . 4 · 0 1

today!

2007-12-21 13:04:50 · answer #5 · answered by makeupguru44 4 · 0 2

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