West Saxon gear, Anglian gēr continues Proto-Germanic *jǣram (''*jē2ram''). Cognates are [[Old High German]] ''jar'', [[Old Norse]] ''ár'' and [[Gothic language|Gothic]] ''jer'', all from a [[PIE]] ''*yērom'' "year, season".
Cognates outside of Germanic are [[Avestan]] ''yare'' "year", [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] ''[[hora|{{lang|grc|ὥρα}}]]'' "year, season, period of time" (whence "[[hour]]"), [[Old Church Slavonic]] ''jaru'' and [[Latin]] ''hornus'' "of this year".
Latin ''annum'' is from a base ''*at-no-''. Both ''*yē-ro-'' and ''*at-no-'' are based on verbal roots expressing movement, ''*at-'' and ''*ey-'' respectively, both meaning "to go" generally. Latin ''annum'' has a cognate in Gothic ''aþnam'' "year".
The Greek word for "year", {{lang|grc|ἔτος}}, is cognate to Latin ''vetus'' "old", from PIE ''*wetus-'' "year" , also preserved in this meaning in [[Sanskrit]] ''{{IAST|vat-sa-}}'' "yearling (calf)".
The SI prefixes may be applied to the year in English to form kiloyear, megayear, and so on. The form ''annum'' is preferred because it is language-neutral (hence kilo-annum, mega-annum, etc.). In such instances, the year in question is always the Julian year of exactly 365.25 days of 86400 seconds.
==Calendar year==
A '''[[calendar year]]''' is the time between two dates with the same name in a [[calendar]].
The [[Gregorian calendar]] attempts to keep the [[vernal equinox]] on or close to [[March 21]]; hence it follows the [[tropical year|vernal equinox year]]. The average length of this calendar's year is 365.2425 mean solar days (which can be thought of as 97 out of 400 years being leap years) whereas the vernal equinox year is 365.2424 days.
Among solar calendars in wide use today, the [[Iranian calendar|Persian calendar]] is one of the most precise. Rather than being based on numerical rules, the Persian year begins on the day (for the time zone of [[Tehran]]) on which the vernal equinox actually falls, as determined by precise astronomical computations.
No astronomical year has an integer number of days or lunar months, so any calendar that follows an astronomical year must have a system of [[intercalation]] such as [[leap year]]s.
In the [[Julian calendar]], the average length of a year was 365.25 days. (This is still used as a convenient time unit in astronomy as shown below.) In a non-leap year, there are 365 days, in a leap year there are 366 days. A leap year occurs every 4 years.
A ''half year'' (one half of a year) may run from January to June or July to December.
==Seasonal year==
A '''[[seasonal year]]''' is the time between successive recurrences of a [[season]]al event such as the flooding of a river, the migration of a species of bird, the flowering of a species of plant, the first frost, or the first scheduled game of a certain sport. All of these events can have wide variations of more than a [[month]] from year to year.
==Fiscal year==
A '''[[fiscal year]]''' or financial year is a 12-month period used for calculating annual financial statements in businesses and other organizations. In many jurisdictions, regulations regarding accounting require such reports once per twelve months, but do not require that the twelve months constitute a calendar year. For example, the federal government of the U.S. has a fiscal year that starts on October 1st instead of [[January 1]]. In the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Canada]], the financial year runs from [[April 1]], and in [[Australia]] it runs from [[July 1]].
==Academic year==
An '''[[Academic term|academic year]]''' refers to the annual period during which a student attends school, college or university.
The school year can be divided up in various ways, two of which are most common in North American educational systems.
* Many schools divide the academic year into three roughly equal-length trimesters (called terms in the UK), more or less coinciding with autumn, winter, and spring. At some, a somewhat shortened summer session, not usually considered part of the regular academic year, is attended by students on a voluntary or elective basis.
* Other schools break the year into two main semesters, a first (typically August through December) and a second (January through May). Each of these main semesters may be split in half by mid-term exams, and each of the halves is referred to as a quarter (or term in some countries). There may also be an elective summer session, and/or a short January session.
*Some other places, such in the United States, have four 'marking periods.' The school year starts in early September and ends in mid-June. There are 180 days in all of school(excluding weekends and breaks.) Most commonly, there is a summer break, which is the last two weeks of June to the beginning of September.
==Astronomical years==
===Julian year===
The '''[[Julian year (astronomy)|Julian year]]''', as used in astronomy and other sciences, is a time unit defined as exactly 365.25 days. This is the normal meaning of the unit "year" (symbol "a" from the [[Latin]] ''annus'', ''annata'') used in various scientific contexts. The Julian century of 36525 days and the Julian millennium of 365250 days are used in astronomical calculations. Fundamentally, expressing a time interval in Julian years is a way to precisely specify how many days (not how many "real" years), for long time intervals where stating the number of days would be unwieldy and unintuitive. By convention, the Julian year is used in the computation of the distance covered by a [[light-year]].
===Sidereal, tropical, and anomalistic years===
:''The relations among these are considered more fully in [[Precession (astronomy)]].''
Each of these three years can be loosely called an 'astronomical year'.
The '''[[sidereal year]]''' is the time taken for the Earth to complete one revolution of its orbit, as measured against a fixed frame of reference (such as the fixed stars, Latin ''sidera'', singular ''sidus''). Its duration in [[SI]] days of 86,400 SI seconds each is on average:
:365.256 363 051 days (365 d 6 h 9 min 9.7676 s) (at the epoch [[J2000.0]] =
The tropical year is the time taken for the Earth to complete one revolution with respect to the framework provided by the intersection of the ecliptic (the plane of the orbit of the Earth) and the plane of the equator (the plane perpendicular to the rotation axis of the Earth). The exact length of a tropical year slightly depends on the chosen starting point: for example the vernal equinox year is the time between successive vernal equinoxes. The mean tropical year (averaged over all ecliptic points) is:
The anomalistic year is the time taken for the Earth to complete one revolution with respect to its apsides. The orbit of the Earth is elliptical; the extreme points, called apsides, are the perihelion, where the Earth is closest to the Sun (January 3 in 2008), and the aphelion, where the Earth is farthest from the Sun (July 4 in 2008). The anomalistic year is usually defined as the time between two successive perihelion passages. Its average duration is:
An average Gregorian year is 365.2425 days = 52.1775 weeks, 8,765.82 hours = 525,949.2 minutes = 31,556,952 seconds (mean solar, not SI).
A common year is 365 days = 8,760 hours = 525,600 minutes = 31,536,000 seconds.
A leap year is 366 days = 8,784 hours = 527,040 minutes = 31,622,400 seconds.
The 400-year cycle of the Gregorian calendar has 146,097 days and hence exactly 20,871 weeks.
See also numerical facts about the Gregorian calendar.