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D

Checked on November 20, 2025
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Executive summary

You asked simply “D” and the available search results are calendars and date-related pages for November–December 2025 and a Visa Bulletin item that references an “item D” in the November 2025 Visa Bulletin (which caused a category to become immediately available in November) [1]. Sources do not explain what your “D” means; reporting returned printable calendar pages and a Visa Bulletin reference that uses the letter D as an item label [2] [3] [1].

1. What the results actually show — calendar pages dominate

Most returned links are generic November 2025 calendar pages — Timeanddate, Calendarr, WinCalendar, Calendar-365, Print‑a‑Calendar, Wiki‑Calendar, Canva, CalendarLabs and similar sites offering printable templates and lists of US holidays and moon phases for November 2025 [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]. These pages focus on layout, printable PDF/PNG downloads and marking federal holidays; none of them discuss a standalone concept labeled only “D” or explain a single‑letter query [2] [3] [4].

2. The one non-calendar hit — “item D” in the Visa Bulletin

The only substantive non-calendar result is the Department of State Visa Bulletin for December 2025, which cites “item D of the November 2025 Visa Bulletin” and says that extension of that item “resulted in this category immediately becoming available in November” [1]. In other words, in immigration bureaucracy the letter D was used as an item label that had concrete effect on visa availability; that is the only direct use of “D” in these results [1].

3. Missing explanations — what sources do not mention

Available sources do not mention what you intended by “D,” nor do the calendar sites define a standalone “D” term or abbreviation for November 2025 events [2] [3] [4]. If you meant “D” as a day, holiday code, or shorthand used in another document, those meanings are not found in the returned pages. The Visa Bulletin reference shows one administrative use of the letter as an item label, but it does not define the underlying policy change in detail in the snippet [1].

4. Two possible interpretations grounded in the results

  • If you meant a calendar day or date: the search results include many printable calendars and one‑page day entries (for example November 20 and November 30, 2025 pages on WinCalendar) that list holidays and countdowns — these are the practical resources to check actual dates [10] [11].
  • If you meant the letter as a policy label: the Visa Bulletin uses letters (like “item D”) to identify specific actions; the December 2025 bulletin explicitly links item D from November to an immediate availability change in an Employment Fourth Preference category [1].

5. How to refine the query for useful answers

State what you mean by “D”: do you mean (a) a date/day in November 2025, (b) a holiday code or label, (c) the “item D” policy referenced in the Visa Bulletin, or (d) something else? If you mean the Visa Bulletin item, specify “Visa Bulletin item D November 2025” — that will surface the full bulletin text and clearer legal context [1]. If you mean a calendar day, say which date or whether you want holidays/moon phases [2] [3] [4].

6. Limitations and next steps

I relied only on the provided results; they are heavy on printable calendars and contain a single legal/policy reference where “D” appears [2] [3] [4] [1]. The sources do not define “D” as a standalone concept beyond the Visa Bulletin label, so I cannot assert any other meaning without further reporting — available sources do not mention alternative definitions of “D.” Tell me which of the two interpretations above (calendar date vs. Visa Bulletin item) you intended and I will pull more targeted information.

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