Aprilis= in roman was named after a Latin word 'aperire' which means 'to open'.
No one. November merely means "ninth month" (in the Roman calendar).
May, or in Latin Maia, named after the the mother the Hermes (Mercury).
The months of January and February were added to the Roman calendar.
The month of July is named after Julius Caesar and August is named after Caesar Augustus. They both changed the months and the amounts of days in them, giving us the calendar that our modern ones are based on.
Julian
April
January--Named for Janus, Roman god of the doorway. January is the entrance to the year. February--Named for the Roman purification ritual Februa, which takes place during this month. March--Named after the Roman god Mars, because this month was the beginning of the military campaign season. Mars was originally the first moth of the year. April--Named after the Latin word aperie, meaning "to open." Since this is the month the flowers would open. May--Named after the Greek goddess of fertility, Maia. June--Named after the Roman goddess Juno, patron of marriage. July--Named to honor Julius Caesar. August--Named to honor Augustus Caesar. September--Originally the seventh month in the Roman calendar. October--Originally the eighth month in the Roman calendar. November--Originally the ninth month in the Roman calendar. December--Originally the tenth month in the Roman calendar.
April 9, 1973 in Roman Calendar is written as: April=APR. 9=ix 1973=MCMLXXIII Answer: APR. ix MCMLXXIII
The month of October is not named after anyone. October got its name because it was the eighth month in the Roman calendar.
January - named after JANUS, the god of beginnings. February - from the Latin word Februarius, the feast of purification. March - from Latin Martius, (month of) the Roman god Mars. April - from the Latin word Aprilis. The name may derive from the Greek goddess of love, Aphrodite. May - from the Greek: Maia, goddess of spring (growth). June - named after the Roman goddess Juno, Queen of the gods. July - from the Roman name Julius (Caesar), after whom the month was named in 44 BC. August - from the Roman name Augustus (Caesar) 8 BC. September - from the Latin word for the seventh month in the early Roman calendar. October - from the Latin word for the eighth month in the early Roman calendar. November - from the Latin word for the ninth month of the early Roman calendar. December - from the Latin word for the tenth month of the early Roman calendar.
No one. November merely means "ninth month" (in the Roman calendar).
March comes from the Latin word Martius. It was the first month of the earliest Roman calendar. It was named after Mars, who was the Roman god of war.
No, there is no month named after Venus. The months in the Gregorian calendar are largely derived from Latin or Roman names. Venus was the Roman goddess of love and beauty, but there is no corresponding month named after her.
The Roman Emperor named the month of September. It is named after the number seven because it was the seventh month of the calendar in use at that time.
First of all it would be the months which would be named after a god or goddess, not the other way round. Secondly, there was no month named after Athena in the various Greek calendars (the Greeks had a number of different calendar because they did not form one unified state) or a month named after her Roman equivalent, Minerva, in the Roman calendar.
2=ij April=APR. (Aprilis) 1992=MCMXCII Therefore 02 April 1992 = ij APR. MCMXCII in Roman Calendar
May, or in Latin Maia, named after the the mother the Hermes (Mercury).