October
See also: october
English
Alternative forms
- Octobre (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle English, borrowed from Old French octobre, from Latin octōber (“eighth month”), from Latin octō (“eight”), from Proto-Indo-European *oḱtṓw (“twice four”). October was the eighth month in the Roman calendar.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
October (plural Octobers)
- The tenth month of the Gregorian calendar, following September and preceding November. Abbreviation: Oct.
- (rare) A female given name.
- 2002 January, Cincinnati Magazine, volume 35, number 4, page 138:
- The other one [book] I just read is October Suite by Maxine Clair (Random House, $23.95). It's about a woman named October. She's a young black schoolteacher in the 1950s ...
- 2009, C.S. Graham, The Archangel Project (→ISBN), page 31:
- From somewhere in the distance came the screaming whine of an emergency vehicle's siren. Lance flipped open his phone. “Get me the address of a woman named October Guinness . . . That's right, October,” he said again, [...]
- 2002 January, Cincinnati Magazine, volume 35, number 4, page 138:
Derived terms
- mid-October
- October beer
- October-bird
- October effect
- Octoberfest
- Octoberist, Octobrist
- October Revolution
- October surprise
- October War
- Red October
Translations
tenth month of the Gregorian calendar
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See also
Scots
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [okˈtobər]
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