August
The dates displayed on this site are essentially based on the format shown by Roman calendars (Julian or Old Style) and are adapted to the Gregorian (New Style) calendars in use by most of the world today in an effort to show the transitions from those historical calendar styles that express the continuity of past and present dates; such as, (Norse-Latin) day-name information and (Roman) month names.
This month of Augustus, formerly Sextilis, (eighth month) shows the Latin names of the months and the Anglo-Saxon (Norse mythological) names for the days of the week, and the Roman-Gregorian numbers for the years.
The phases of the moon shown in this calendar are based on Universal Time (UT), or Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which refers to the mean solar time at the Greenwich meridian adopted as the standard time in a zone that includes the British Isles. The Greenwich meridian is the prime meridian that passes through the former Royal Observatory at Greenwich. It was adopted internationally as the zero of longitude in 1884.
Subscribe to Latin-Greek Cross References search area.
Sign up for the FREE Focusing on Words Newsletter.
Use this e-mail form for questions or comments.
| Arabic | Roman | Roman | Anglo-Saxon | English |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day | Day | Week | Week | Week |
| Numbers | Names | Days | Days | Days |
| 1 | Calends | dies Jovis | Thursdaeg | Thursday |
| last | quarter | moon | ||
| 2 | IV ad Nones | dies Veneris | Frigedaeg | Friday |
| 3 | III ad Nones | dies Saturni | Saterndaeg | Saturday |
| 4 | Pridie Nones | dies solis | sunnandaeg | Sunday |
| 5 | Nones | dies lunae | monandaeg | Monday |
| waning | crescent | moon | ||
| 6 | VIII ad Ides | dies Martis | Tiwesdaeg | Tuesday |
| 7 | VII ad Ides | dies Mercurii | Wodensdaeg | Wednesday |
| 8 | VI ad Ides | dies Jovis | Thursdaeg | Thursday |
| new | moon | |||
| 9 | V ad Ides | dies Veneris | Frigedaeg | Friday |
| 10 | IV ad Ides | dies Saturni | Saterndaeg | Saturday |
| 11 | III ad Ides | dies solis | sunnandaeg | Sunday |
| 12 | Pridie Ides | dies lunae | monandaeg | Monday |
| waxing | crescent | moon | ||
| 13 | Ides | dies Martis | Tiwesdaeg | Tuesday |
| 14 | XIX ad Sep. Cal. | dies Mercurii | Wodensdaeg | Wednesday |
| 15 | XVIII ad Sep. Cal. | dies Jovis | Thursdaeg | Thursday |
| first | quarter | moon | ||
| 16 | XVII ad Sep. Cal. | dies Veneris | Frigedaeg | Friday |
| 17 | XVI ad Sep. Cal. | dies Saturni | Saterndaeg | Saturday |
| 18 | XV ad Sep. Cal. | dies solis | sunnandaeg | Sunday |
| 19 | XIV ad Sep. Cal. | dies lunae | monandaeg | Monday |
| waxing | gibbous | moon | ||
| 20 | XIII ad Sep. Cal. | dies Martis | Tiwesdaeg | Tuesday |
| 21 | XII ad Sep. Cal. | dies Mercurii | Wodensdaeg | Wednesday |
| 22 | XI ad Sep. Cal. | dies Jovis | Thursdaeg | Thursday |
| full | moon | |||
| 23 | X ad Sep. Cal. | dies Veneris | Frigedaeg | Friday |
| 24 | IX ad Sep. Cal. | dies Saturni | Saterndaeg | Saturday |
| 25 | VIII ad Sep. Cal. | dies solis | sunnandaeg | Sunday |
| 26 | VII ad Sep. Cal. | dies lunae | monandaeg | Monday |
| 27 | VI ad Sep. Cal. | dies Martis | Tiwesdaeg | Tuesday |
| waning | gibbous | moon | ||
| 28 | V ad Sep. Cal. | dies Mercurii | Wodensdaeg | Wednesday |
| 29 | IV ad Sep. Cal. | dies Jovis | Thursdaeg | Thursday |
| 30 | III ad Sep. Cal. | dies Veneris | Frigedaeg | Friday |
| 31 | Pridie Sep. Cal. | dies Saturni | Saterndaeg | Saturday |
| last | quarter | moon |
| January, 2002 | February, 2002 | March, 2002 | April, 2002 |
| May, 2002 | June, 2002 | July, 2002 | August, 2002 |
| September, 2002 | October, 2002 | November, 2002 | December, 2002 |
You may also see the transitions of the Roman calendars from the first one to the latest version:
Six Roman Calendars, from King Romulus to Pope Gregory XIII
Use your browser Back or Return button so you can return to the month/year you just left or use this link to return to the complete lists of months and years.
We are prisoners of time. We can only travel forward in time. We have time past that is in our memory. The future can now be travelled only in our imagination.
-Author Unknown
We find it the worst thing about time that we know not what to do with it.
-R. W. Emerson
Home Page | Contents
Gain access to the unabridged
Latin-Greek Cross-References
for paying subscribers
You may subscribe here to the unabridged
Latin-Greek Cross References search page
Sample page of Latin-Greek Cross References
Sample of Self-Scoring Quizzes
Word Sources, free access to the abridged version
of the Latin-Greek Cross References
Words for a Modern Age book
FREE Vocabulary-Newsletter Subscription
Anesthesia History
Blind Men and Elephant poem
Cremation of Sam McGee poem
Oxymora introduction and alphabetical Listing
Visit the Word Focus Website for other vocabulary links
Basic Latin-Greek prefixes and roots
at the Get Words Website
An inventory of cross-reference groups
that have been completed
with available quizzes at Word Files
For special poetry, links to news sites, etc.,
visit the Best Clips Website.
See the special link to Latin-Greek Quotations
(mottoes, proverbs, phrases, and words)
with a custom-made search page located
at the Lex Files Websites.
Except for copying to disk for archival purposes, and for normal fair use exceptions relating to the quoting of short passages for purposes of commentary and the like, no part of the writing or the nonpublic domain graphics either herein or in the local links hereto may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted or retransmitted in any form by any means without the express prior written consent of John Robertson. Rights in remote links are as established by their respective owners.