Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - How do you say 65438+ February in English?

How do you say 65438+ February in English?

Twelve-month English words and abbreviations:

January to January

February, February, February-February.

March, March-March

April, April-April.

May. May.

June, June, June.

July, July? —— Jul。

August.-August.

September, September-September.

October October October to October

November November to November

December December-December

Extended data

I. Usage

1, January

English? 【dnju? ri]? ; Beautiful? ['dnjueri]?

It's quite warm for January.

As far as January is concerned, the weather is quite warm.

February, February

English? ['February? ri]; Beautiful? ['februeri]? ?

The second month of the year is February.

Forward, forward

English? 【mɑ? t? ]? ; ? Beautiful? 【mɑ? rt? ]? ?

Noun (short for noun)? March; March; Demonstrations; Make steady progress; march forward

Verb (short for verb)? March; Forward; March; Make friends with peers; set an example

This $ TERM will start school on March 1. This semester begins on March 1 day.

Twelve months in English can only be used to represent the months in the solar calendar, not the lunar calendar in China. For example, January is the first month of the Gregorian calendar month, so it cannot be used in the China lunar calendar. 1 month of the lunar calendar is usually represented by the first month.

If it is not used in a specific sense, nouns indicating months such as January are generally without articles.

In English, when is the month. Use the preposition in, for example, in January.

source

1, January:1entered English in the late 3rd century, and came directly from Genever; in the northern part of old French; Januarius originally came from classical Latin, which means the moon in Garnes. Ganez is a door god in ancient Roman mythology. It is said that there are two faces, one facing the future and the other facing the past. In this way, January is the month of the handover of the old and new years.

2.March:65438+ entered English at the beginning of the 5th century, directly derived from the old French marcher, meaning marching and walking; From old French, marchier means to jump.