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RE: month names
Not many things naturally come in twelves: even months and hours
are highly artificial (there are actually 13 lunations in a year and
hours are open to any kind of cutting you want, though even the
wildest metricists never seem to have come to a 10 -- or 20 -- hour
day, each with 100 minutes, each with 100 seconds, and so on),
And even eggs are no longer put into those roughly square boxes of
3 x 4.
But the roman month names are still close to universal -- even when other
names are
common, the roman ones are still, on a bet, understood and used in legal
documents, say. (Forgetting the Revolutionary Calendar with its Brumiare and
Thermidor). Seasonal names ("the moon of acorn harvesting" and the like) re
clearly out for international usage. Shifting to other systems: the lunation
calendar, or the half-months named for letters of some alphabet or other, or
the season-and-week system from the card deck (or the 18 20-day periods of
the Mayans -- or is it 20 18-day periods? -- and then the party), are all
beside the point, since we need word for the system we are in. The more
local systems can fend for themselves -- and they happily seem tied to more
or less single languages (Arabic, Hebrew, Chinese, Hindi in a very extended
sense), so their month names can be transliterated without qualms (though not
without problems, I'll bet). Is the variation in names for the civil
calendar all that great that it should be an exception?
On the other hand, we officially use numbers in dates, so perhaps we should
just use numbers in the names as well (or never use the names at all?)