Dictionary Definition
month
Noun
1 one of the twelve divisions of the calendar
year; "he paid the bill last month" [syn: calendar
month]
2 a time unit of 30 days; "he was given a month
to pay the bill"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Middle English < Old English mōnað < Proto-Germanic *mænoth- < Proto-Indo-European *me(n)ses- (moon, month), probably from PIE base *mê- (to measure), referring to the moon’s phases as the measure of time. Cognate with moon.Pronunciation
- /mʌnθ/
- /mVnT/
- Rhymes: -ʌnθ
Noun
Related terms
Translations
period into which a year is divided
- Albanian: muaj
- Amuzgo: chi'
- Arabic: (šáhr)
- Aramaic:
- Armenian: ամիս
- Bosnian: mjesec
- Breton: miz , mizioù p; mizvezh , mizvezhioù p
- Bulgarian: месец, месеци
- Catalan: mes ^
- Chinese: 月 (yuè), 月份 (yuèfèn)
- Crimean Tatar: ay
- Croatian: mjesec
- Czech: měsíc
- Danish: måned
- Dutch: maand
- Estonian: kuu
- Ewe: dzinu, ɣleti
- Finnish: kuukausi (kuu when preceded by a modifier, e.g., ensi kuussa = next month) (^)
- French: mois
- German: Monat ^
- Greek: μήνας
- Hebrew: חודש
- Hindi: महीना (mahīnā)
- Hungarian: hónap
- Icelandic: mánuður
- Inari Sami: mánuppaje
- Indonesian: bulan
- Irish: mí
- Italian: mese
- Japanese: 月 (つき, tsukí; がつ, gatsú)
- Korean: 달 (dal), 월 (weol)
- Kurdish:
- Lao: ເດືອນ
- Latin: mensis
- Latvian: mēnesis
- Lithuanian: mėnuo
- Livonian: kū
- Lower Sorbian: mjasec
- Malay: bulan
- Malayalam: മാസം (māsam)
- Maltese: xahar
- Manchu: biya
- Marathi: महिना (mahinā)
- Northern Sami: mánotbadji
- Norwegian: måned
- Ojibwe: giizis
- Old English: monaþ
- Polish: miesiąc
- Persian: (māh)
- Portuguese: mês
- Romanian: lună
- Romansch: mais
- Russian: месяц (mésjats)
- Scottish Gaelic: mìos
- Serbian: месец (mesec)
- Skolt Sami: mään, määnpââ´jj
- Slovak: mesiac
- Slovene: mesec
- Spanish: mes
- Swahili: mwezi (nc 3/4)
- Swedish: månad
- Telugu: నెల (nela), మాసము (maasamu)
- Thai: (deuan)
- Turkish: ay
- Ukrainian: місяць (mísjats’)
- Upper Sorbian: měsac
- Urdu: (mahīnā) , (mahīnah)
- Welsh: mis
- Yiddish: חודש (khóydesh)
See also
Extensive Definition
The month is a unit of time, used with calendars, which is
approximately as long as some natural period
related to the motion of the Moon; month and Moon
are cognates. The
traditional concept arose with the cycle of moon phases;
such months (lunations) are synodic
months and last approximately 29.53 days. From excavated tally sticks,
researchers have deduced that people counted days in relation to
the Moon's phases as early as the Paleolithic
age. Synodic months are still the basis of many calendars
today.
Astronomical background
The motion of the Moon in its orbit is very complicated and its period is not constant. Moreover, many cultures (most notably those using the ancient Hebrew (Jewish) calendar and the Islamic calendar) start a month with the first appearance of the thin crescent of the new moon after sunset over the western horizon. The date and time of this actual observation depends on the exact geographical longitude as well as latitude, atmospheric conditions, the visual acuity of the observers, etc. Therefore the beginning and lengths of months in these calendars can not be accurately predicted. Most Jews currently follow a precalculated calendar, but the Karaites rely on actual moon observations.Sidereal month
The period of the Moon's orbit as defined with respect to the celestial sphere is known as a sidereal month because it is the time it takes the Moon to return to a given position among the stars (lang-la sidus): 27.321661 days (27 d 7 h 43 min 11.5 s). This type of month has been observed among cultures in the Middle East, India, and China in the following way: they divided the sky into 27 or 28 lunar mansions, defined by asterisms (apparent groups of stars), one for each day of the sidereal month.Tropical month
It is customary to specify positions of celestial bodies with respect to the vernal equinox. Because of precession, this point moves back slowly along the ecliptic. Therefore it takes the Moon less time to return to an ecliptic longitude of zero than to the same point amidst the fixed stars: 27.321582 days (27 d 7 h 43 min 4.7 s). This slightly shorter period is known as tropical month; cf. the analogous tropical year of the Sun.Anomalistic month
Like all orbits, the Moon's orbit is an ellipse rather than a circle. However, the orientation (as well as the shape) of this orbit is not fixed. In particular, the position of the extreme points (the line of the apsides: perigee and apogee), makes a full circle (lunar precession) in about nine years. It takes the Moon longer to return to the same apsis because it moved ahead during one revolution. This longer period is called the anomalistic month, and has an average length of 27.554551 days (27 d 13 h 18 min 33.2 s). The apparent diameter of the Moon varies with this period, and therefore this type has some relevance for the prediction of eclipses (see Saros), whose extent, duration, and appearance (whether total or annular) depend on the exact apparent diameter of the Moon. The apparent diameter of the full moon varies with the full moon cycle which is the beat period of the synodic and anomalistic month, and also the period after which the apsides point to the Sun again.Draconic month
Also called the nodical month. The orbit of the moon lies in a plane that is tilted with respect to the plane of the ecliptic: it has an inclination of about five degrees. The line of intersection of these planes defines two points on the celestial sphere: the ascending node, when the moon's path crosses the ecliptic as the moon moves into the northern hemisphere, and descending node when the moon's path crosses the ecliptic as the moon moves into the southern hemisphere. The draconic or nodical month is the average interval between two successive transits of the moon through its ascending node. Because of the sun's gravitational pull on the moon, the moon's orbit gradually rotates westward on its axis, which means the nodes gradually rotate around the earth. As a result, the time it takes the moon to return to the same node is shorter than a sidereal month. It lasts 27.212220 days (27 d 5 h 5 min 35.8 s). The plane of the moon's orbit precesses over a full circle in about 18.6 years.Because the moon's orbit is inclined with respect
to the ecliptic, the sun, moon, and earth are in line only when the
moon is at one of the nodes. Whenever this happens a solar or lunar
eclipse is possible. The
name "draconic" refers to a mythical dragon, said to live in the
nodes and eat the sun or moon during an eclipse.
Synodic month
This is the average period of the Moon's revolution with respect to the sun. The synodic month is responsible for the moon's phases, because the Moon's appearance depends on the position of the Moon with respect to the Sun as seen from the Earth. While the moon is orbiting the earth, the Earth is progressing in its orbit around the Sun. This means that after completing a sidereal month the Moon must move a little farther to reach the new position of the Earth with respect to the Sun. This longer period is called the synodic month from the Greek (), meaning "with the way [of the sun]". Because of perturbations in the orbits of the Earth and Moon, the actual time between lunations may range from about 29.27 to about 29.83 days. The long-term average duration is 29.530589 days (29 d 12 h 44 min 2.9 s). The synodic month is used in the Metonic cycle.Month lengths
Here is a list of the average length of the various astronomical lunar months . These are not constant, so a first-order (linear) approximation of the secular change is provided:Note: time expressed in Ephemeris
Time (more precisely Terrestrial
Time) with days of 86,400 SI seconds. y is years since the
epoch (2000), expressed in Julian years of 365.25 days. Note that
for calendrical calculations, one would probably use days measured
in the time scale of Universal
Time, which follows the somewhat unpredictable rotation of the
Earth, and progressively accumulates a difference with ephemeris
time called ΔT.
Calendrical consequences
- For more details on this topic, see lunar calendar and lunisolar calendar.
At the simplest level, all lunar calendars are
based on the approximation that 2 lunations last 59 days: a 30 day
full month followed by a 29 day hollow month — but this is only
marginally accurate and quickly needs correction by using larger
cycles, or the equivalent of leap days.
Second, the synodic month does not fit easily
into the year, which makes
constructing accurate, rule-based lunisolar calendars difficult.
The most common solution to this problem is the Metonic
cycle, which takes advantage of the fact that 235 lunations are
approximately 19 tropical
years (which add up to not quite 6940 days). However, a Metonic
calendar (such as the Hebrew
calendar) will drift against the seasons by about 1 day every
200 years.
The problems of creating reliable lunar calendars
may explain why solar
calendars, having months which no longer relate to the phase of
the moon, and being based only on the motion of the sun against the
sky, have generally replaced lunar calendars for civil use in most
societies.
Months in various calendars
Julian and Gregorian calendars
The Gregorian
calendar, like the Julian
calendar before it, has twelve months:
The average month in the Gregorian calendar has a
length of 30.4167 days or 4.345 weeks in a non-leap year and 30.5
days or 4.357 weeks in a leap year, or 30.436875 days in a mean
Gregorian month overall (364.2425 ÷ 12).
Months existing in the Roman
calendar in the past include:
- Mercedonius, an occasional month after February to realign the calendar.
- Quintilis, renamed to July in honour of Julius Caesar.
- Sextilis, renamed to August in honour of Augustus.
The famous mnemonic
Thirty days hath September is the most common way of teaching
the lengths of the months in the English-speaking world.
The knuckles of the four fingers of one's hand
and the spaces between them can be used to remember the lengths of
the months. By making a fist, each month will be listed as one
proceeds across the hand. All months landing on a knuckle are 31
days long and those landing between them are not. When the knuckle
of the index finger is reached (July), go back to the first knuckle
(or over to the first knuckle on the other fist, held next to the
first) and continue with August. This physical mnemonic has been
taught to primary school students for many decades.
Calends, nones, and ides
The ides occur on the thirteenth day in eight of the months, but in March, May, July, and October, they occur on the fifteenth. The nones always occur 8 days before the ides, i.e., on the fifth or the seventh. The calends are always the first day of the month.French Republican calendar
This calendar was proposed during the French Revolution, and used by the French government for about twelve years from late 1793. There were twelve months of 30 days each, grouped into three ten-day weeks called décades. The five or six extra days needed to approximate the tropical year were placed after the months at the end of each year. A period of four years ending on a leap day was to be called a Franciade. It began at the autumn equinox:- Autumn:
- Winter:
- Spring:
- Summer:
Islamic calendar
There are also twelve months in the Islamic calendar. They are named as follows:- Muharram ul Haram (or shortened to Muharram) محرّم
- Safar صفر
- Rabi`-ul-Awwal (Rabi' I) ربيع الأول
- Rabi`-ul-Akhir (or Rabi` al-Tיhaany) (Rabi' II) ربيع الآخر أو ربيع الثاني
- Jumaada-ul-Awwal (Jumaada I) جمادى الأول
- Jumaada-ul-Akhir (or Jumaada al-Thaany) (Jumaada II) جمادى الآخر أو جمادى الثاني
- Rajab رجب
- Sha'aban شعبان
- Ramadhan رمضان
- Shawwal شوّال
- Dhul Qadah (or Thw al-Qi`dah) ذو القعدة
- Dhul Hijja (or Thw al-Hijjah) ذو الحجة
Hebrew Calendar
The Hebrew calendar has 12 or 13 months.Adar 1 is only added 7 times in 19 years. In
ordinary years, Adar 2 is simply called Adar.
Hindu Calendar
The Hindu
Calendar has various systems of naming the months. The months
in the lunar calendar are:
These are also the names used in the Indian
national calendar for the newly redefined months.
The names in the solar calendar are just the
names of the zodiac sign
in which the sun travels. They are
- Chitirai
- Vaikasi
- Aani
- Aadi
- Aavani
- Purratasi
- Aiypasi
- Kaarthigai
- Maargazhi
- Thai
- Maasi
- Panguni
- Duruthu
- Nawam
- Madin
- Bak (Sihala and Hindu New Year)
- Vesak
- Poson
- Asela
- Nikini
- Binara
- Vap
- Iil
- Unduwap
Iranian/Persian calendar
The Iranian / Persian calendar, currently used in Iran and Afghanistan, also has 12 months. The Persian names are included in the parentheses.- Farvardin (فروردین), 31 days
- Ordibehesht (اردیبهشت), 31 days
- Khordad (خرداد), 31 days
- Tir (تیر), 31 days
- Mordad (مرداد), 31 days
- Shahrivar (شهریور), 31 days
- Mehr (مهر), 30 days
- Aban (آبان), 30 days
- Azar (آذر), 30 days
- Dey (دی), 30 days
- Bahman (بهمن), 30 days
- Esfand (اسفند), 29 days, 30 in leap years
Icelandic/Old Norse calendar
The old Icelandic calendar is not in official use anymore, but some Icelandic holidays and annual feasts are still calculated from it. It has 12 months, broken down into two groups of six often termed "winter months" and "summer months". The calendar is peculiar in that the months always start on the same weekday rather than on the same date. Hence Þorri always starts on a Friday sometime between January 19 and January 25 (Old style: January 9 to January 15) , Góa always starts on a Sunday between February 18 and February 24 (Old style: February 8 to February 14).- Skammdegi ("Short days")
- Gormánuður (mid October - mid November, "slaughter month" or "Gór's month")
- Ýlir (mid November - mid December, "Yule month")
- Mörsugur (mid December - mid January, "fat sucking month")
- Þorri (mid January - mid February, "frozen snow month")
- Góa (mid February - mid March, "Góa's month, see Nór")
- Einmánuður (mid March - mid April, "lone" or "single month")
- Náttleysi ("Nightless days")
- Harpa (mid April - mid May, Harpa is a female name, probably a forgotten goddess, first day of Harpa is celebrated as Sumardagurinn fyrsti - first day of summer)
- Skerpla (mid May - mid June, another forgotten goddess)
- Sólmánuður (mid June - mid July, "sun month")
- Heyannir (mid July - mid August, "hay business month")
- Tvímánuður (mid August - mid September, "two" or "second month")
- Haustmánuður (mid September - mid October, "autumn month")
Old Hungarian calendar
Historically Hungary used a 12-month calendar that appears to have been zodiacal in nature but eventually came to correspond to the Gregorian months as shown below:- Boldogasszony hava (January, ‘month of the happy/blessed lady’)
- Böjtelő hava (February, ‘month of early fasting/Lent’ or ‘month before fasting/Lent’)
- Böjtmás hava (March, ‘second month of fasting/Lent’)
- Szent György hava (April, ‘St. George’s month)
- Pünkösd hava (May, ‘Pentecost month’)
- Szent Iván hava (June, ‘St. Ivan’s month’)
- Szent Jakab hava (July, ‘St. James’ month’)
- Kisasszony hava (August, ‘month of the young lady [Blessed Virgin]’)
- Szent Mihály hava (September, ‘St. Michael’s month’)
- Mindszent hava (October, ‘all saints month’)
- Szent András hava (November, ‘St. Andrew’s month’)
- Karácsony hava (December, ‘month of Yule/Christmas’)
Old Egyptian calendar
The ancient civil Egyptian calendar had a year that was 365 days long and was divided into 12 months of 30 days each, plus 5 extra days (epagomenes) at the end of the year. The months were divided into 3 "weeks" of ten days each. Because the ancient Egyptian year was almost a quarter of a day shorter than the solar year and stellar events "wandered" through the calendar, it is referred to as Annus Vagus or "Wandering Year".- Thout
- Paopi
- Hathor
- Koiak
- Tooba
- Emshir
- Paremhat
- Paremoude
- Pashons
- Paoni
- Epip
- Mesori
Notes
month in Tosk Albanian: Monat
month in Old English (ca. 450-1100): Mōnaþ
month in Arabic: شهر
month in Official Aramaic (700-300 BCE):
ܝܪܚܐ
month in Asturian: Mes
month in Min Nan: Goe̍h
month in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa): Месяц
(адзінка вымярэння часу)
month in Bosnian: Mjesec (period)
month in Bulgarian: Месец
month in Catalan: Mes
month in Chuvash: Уйăх
month in Cebuano: Bulan (panahon)
month in Cree: Kâ-isiwepahki
month in Czech: Kalendářní měsíc
month in Danish: Måned
month in German: Monat
month in Emiliano-Romagnolo: Més
month in Spanish: Mes
month in Esperanto: Monato
month in Basque: Hilabete
month in Persian: ماه (سال)
month in French: Mois
month in Western Frisian: Moanne (tiid)
month in Friulian: Mês
month in Galician: Mes sinódico
month in Korean: 달 (시간)
month in Hindi: मास
month in Upper Sorbian: Měsac
month in Croatian: Mjesec (period)
month in Ido: Monato
month in Indonesian: Bulan (penanggalan)
month in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Mense
month in Icelandic: Mánuður
month in Italian: Mese
month in Hebrew: חודש
month in Kalaallisut: Qaammat
month in Kannada: ತಿಂಗಳು
month in Georgian: თვე
month in Kazakh: Ай
month in Cornish: Mis
month in Swahili (macrolanguage): Mwezi
(wakati)
month in Kongo: Ngonda (manaka)
month in Haitian: Mwa
month in Kurdish: Meh
month in Ladino: Mez
month in Latin: Mensis
month in Lao: ເດືອນ
month in Latvian: Mēnesis
month in Lithuanian: Mėnuo
month in Lingala: Sánzá (ntángo)
month in Lojban: masti
month in Hungarian: Hónap
month in Macedonian: Месец
month in Maori: Marama (maramataka)
month in Burmese: Months
month in Dutch: Maand
month in Japanese: 月 (暦)
month in Norwegian: Måned
month in Norwegian Nynorsk: Månad
month in Narom: Mais
month in Occitan (post 1500): Mes
month in Low German: Maand (Tiet)
month in Polish: Miesiąc
month in Portuguese: Mês
month in Kölsch: Moohnd (Kalländo)
month in Romanian: Lună (timp)
month in Vlax Romani: Chhon (bersheski)
month in Quechua: Killa pacha
month in Russian: Месяц
month in Northern Sami: Mánotbadji
month in Albanian: Muaji
month in Simple English: Month
month in Swati: Ínyangá
month in Slovak: Mesiac (časová jednotka)
month in Slovenian: Mesec
month in Somali: Bilaha
month in Serbian: Месеци
month in Serbo-Croatian: Mjesec (jedinica)
month in Finnish: Kuukausi
month in Swedish: Månad
month in Tagalog: Buwan (panahon)
month in Tamil: மாதம்
month in Tatar: Ay
month in Thai: เดือน
month in Tok Pisin: Mun (taim)
month in Turkish: Ay (zaman)
month in Ukrainian: Місяць (календарний)
month in Võro: Kuu (aomõõt)
month in Yiddish: מאנאט
month in Yoruba: Osù
month in Zamboanga Chavacano: Mes
month in Chinese: 月
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abundant year, academic year, annum, bissextile year, calendar
month, calendar year, century, common year, day, decade, decennary, decennium, defective year,
fiscal year, fortnight, hour, leap year, lunar month, lunar
year, lunation,
luster, lustrum, man-hour, microsecond, millennium, millisecond, minute, moment, moon, quarter, quinquennium, regular year,
second, semester, session, sidereal year, solar
year, sun, term, trimester, twelvemonth, week, weekday, year