November, because it has 30 days, while the others have 31 days.
Well, darling, odd months are those that don't fit the even-month bill. So, we're talking about January, March, May, July, September, and November. Those are the months that like to keep things interesting by not being divisible by 2.
January March April May September October
Common Law - 2012 Odd Couples 1-9 was released on: USA: 20 July 2012 Canada: 4 November 2012 Germany: 18 November 2012 Hungary: 14 December 2012 Netherlands: 2 March 2013
Take your pick! January: The other three are not at the start of the modern calendar. February: The other three contain 31 days. March: The other three contain 3 vowels. December: The other three contain "ar".
ODD
November is the 11th month.
...january third...
Odd Wolstad was born on January 13, 1925.
Odd Wolstad died on January 27, 1971.
Odd Grythe was born on November 14, 1918, in Norway.
They were the same as our months, except they used Latin. January=Ianuarius, February=Februarius, March=Martius, April=Aprilis, May=Maius, June=Iunius, July=Iulius, August=Augustus, September=same as ours, October=same as ours, November=same as ours, December=same as ours.Answer:Initially the Romans had only ten named months:Martius "March", Aprilis "April", Maius "May", Junius "June", Quintilis "July", Sextilis "August", September "September", October "October", November "November", December "December", and probably two unnamed months in the dead of winter (apparently no one cared as no agricultural events were happening!).The first month of the year was Martius "March". This gave the "number" months Quintilius (5) to December (10) the same number as their position in the year.Around 700 BCE the two months Januarius "January" and Februarius "February" were added and the beginning of the year was moved from Marius to Januarius. Also at this time the number of days in several months were made odd, to give them a lucky number. Just to confuse the issue, after Februarius there was occasional additional month of Intercalaris "intercalendar". to balance out the irregularities of leap years. This change bumped the "number" months to be in the wrong positions (December (10) was now in the 12th spot)The names of Julius and Augustus Caesar were used to replace the names of Quintilus (giving us July) and Sextilis (giving us August)
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