The answer depends on exactly where in the world you are referencing. There are world time zone maps and there are time zones within different countries or continents that are different. Some of the different zones are:
The world time zone called Greenwich Mean Time has 25 time zones. It is set up with a starting point in Greenwich, England as point Zero and then east and west from there a division of 12 zones east and 12 zones west across the world map.
Other time zone maps have different divisions such as:
The USA time zone map has 6 time zones; Asia has up to 8 (depending on how you count); Australia has 6 (more or less, depending, some with, some without Daylight Savings Time- DST); Russia has 11; South America and Africa have 4; Mexico has 4 (one of which does not observe DST); Europe and Greenland have 3; and the Middle East has a a large number of them. In addition, the US Military uses its own time zone maps that use letters to designate the zone, such as Zone A, Zone B, Zone C, etc.
When time zones were adopted universally, time anywhere on the world became standard.
There are a few different time zones in North America. There is Atlantic Standard Time, Alaska Standard Time, Central Standard Time, Eastern Standard Time, Mountain Standard Time, Pacific Standard Time, and Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time.
The Earth is divided into 24 time zones, each approximately 15 degrees of longitude wide. This system creates the basis for standard time zones around the world.
At any given time, the clocks around the world are set to at least 38 different times, and these time zones have about 165 different names, including about 130 different names just for Standard Time designations.
Because the continental united states HAS four time zones.
40 time zones in the world.
4
there is 24 standard time zones!
When time zones were adopted universally, time anywhere on the world became standard.
There are a few different time zones in North America. There is Atlantic Standard Time, Alaska Standard Time, Central Standard Time, Eastern Standard Time, Mountain Standard Time, Pacific Standard Time, and Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time.
The Earth is divided into 24 time zones, each approximately 15 degrees of longitude wide. This system creates the basis for standard time zones around the world.
There are 24 time zones in the world.
one
At any given time, the clocks around the world are set to at least 38 different times, and these time zones have about 165 different names, including about 130 different names just for Standard Time designations.
There are 11 time zones in Russia.
28 states
Because the continental united states HAS four time zones.