There are 12 months in the Hebrew calendar. In a leap year there are Adar A and Adar B. Adar is the sixth month.
The origin of the name June given to the sixth calendar month comes from the Roman goddess Juno.
Cheshvan
Kislev is the 9th Month on the Hebrew Calendar, but its name has no Hebrew meaning other than the name of the month. The word was probably borrowed from another language, probably Akkadian.
Av is the 5th Month of the year on the Hebrew calendar. It usually occurs in June or July
Shevat. It doesn't correspond to February exactly, but it is the Hebrew month that (on average) has the greatest overlap with February.See also:How the Hebrew calendar works
Prior to being renamed August, the month was known as Sextilis in the Roman calendar. It was the sixth month of the year in the Roman calendar, which only had ten months originally. The name "August" was chosen in honor of the Roman emperor Augustus Caesar.
Elul (????) is the 6th month on the Hebrew calendar. The name of the month, like all the other Hebrew months, was brought from the Babylonian Exile. Elul originated from the Akkadian word for "Harvest". A similar month name was also used in Akkadian, in the form el?lu.
Kislev is the name of the 9th month of the Jewish calendar. The 25th day of Kislev is the first day of Chanukah. The month overlaps with the month of December.
"Nisan" (the first month of the Hebrew calendar) is mentioned by name twice: Nehemiah 2:1 and Esther 3:7.
The name of the eleventh month in the Republican calendar was Thermidor, after the heat of summer. The Republican calendar was the calendar implemented after the French Revolution.
Meitheamh is the Irish language name for the month of June.