There are two answers to this depending on when you start counting.
Answer 1: Starting in Nisan (as per Exodus 12:2 and Leviticus ch.23),
the sixth month is Elul. Roughly coincides with September.
Answer 2: Starting in Tishrei
Adar; or Adar I in a Leap Year. Roughly coincides with March.
Av (also called by its customary longer name, Menachem Av).
Kislev (כיסלו) which usually falls in Novemer or December.
Iyyar (אייר)
September
Tishrei.
Iyar.
tishri
It is the seventh month of the Jewish year, equivalent to Nisan of the modern Jewish calendar. As the Jewish calendar is different in length to the Gregorian calendar, there is not a directly corresponding month.
June
Yes (in the Jewish calendar)
The month September is derived from the Latin word "septem," meaning "seven," as it was originally the seventh month in the Roman calendar before January and February were added.
It used to be on the Roman calendar but they changed it and now it's the ninth month.
The Jewish calendar doesn't have an equivalent to February. Months on the Jewish calendar do not line up evenly with months on the western calendar.Answer:The month of February roughly corresponds to Shevat.
The week culminates in the seventh day, the Holy Shabbat (shabbat kodesh, abbreviated ).
Nisan
Rosh Chodesh refers to the new moon which traditionally marked the beginning of each month in the Jewish calendar.
Germinal (french Republican calender search in wikipedia)
Elul is the 6th month of the Jewish year, roughly corresponding to September.Elul is the sixth month of the Jewish calendar. It roughly corresponds with September, though its dates shift several days back and forth as the (Hebrew) lunisolar calendar is periodically realigned with the solar seasons (the Gregorian calendar).
Kislev is the name of the 9th month of the Jewish calendar. The 25th day of Kislev is the first day of Chanukah. The month overlaps with the month of December.