Time Formats
There are two ways to write time, and CTET likes to test the conversion between them. The 12-hour clock runs the numbers 1 to 12 twice a day, so it needs the labels a.m. and p.m. to say which half you mean. A.m. (ante meridiem, 'before midday') covers midnight through to just before noon; p.m. (post meridiem, 'after midday') covers noon through to just before midnight. The two values everyone confuses are the twelves: 12:00 midnight is 12 a.m. and begins the day, while 12:00 noon is 12 p.m. and sits in the middle of it. The 24-hour clock — railway or 'military' time — sidesteps the labels entirely by numbering the hours 0000 to 2359. To convert, leave morning hours as they are (1:00 a.m. is 0100), but turn 12 a.m. into 0000; for the afternoon and evening, add 12 to the hour (1:00 p.m. becomes 1300, 11:59 p.m. becomes 2359), with the one exception that 12 noon stays 1200. A frequent slip is converting 12:30 p.m. to 0030 instead of 1230 — only the hours after 1 p.m. take the +12. Tying these formats to a child's day (wake at 7 a.m., lunch at 1 p.m., bed at 9:30 p.m.) is the pedagogy point worth remembering.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Units of time (the ladder you must know cold)
| Seconds to minute | 60 seconds = 1 minute |
|---|---|
| Minutes to hour | 60 minutes = 1 hour (so 1 hour = 3600 seconds) |
| Hours to day | 24 hours = 1 day (= 1440 minutes = 86400 seconds) |
| Days to week | 7 days = 1 week; 14 days = 1 fortnight |
| Months & years | 12 months = 1 year; 10 yrs = decade; 100 yrs = century |
Clock angles & the leap-year rule
| Minute hand | sweeps 360 deg in 60 min = 6 deg per minute |
|---|---|
| Hour hand | sweeps 360 deg in 12 hr = 30 deg per hour = 0.5 deg per minute |
| One number gap | 5 minutes = 30 deg between two clock numbers |
| Common vs leap year | 365 days = 52 weeks + 1 day; 366 days = 52 weeks + 2 days |
| Leap-year test | divisible by 4; but a century (00) year only if divisible by 400 |