| MESSIDOR | Tenth month of the French Revolutionary calendar, falling within June and July; from Latin, 'harvest' (8) |
| NIVOSE | Fourth month of the French Revolutionary calendar, falling within December and January; from Latin, 'snowy' (6) |
| LEGGY | Stage great Fourth of July from description of model (5) |
| ORANGEMEN | They get their marching orders in July from old green man surprisingly (9) |
| SHAWWAL | Tenth month of the Islamic calendar, falling between Ramadan and Dhu al-Qidah (7) |
| ADAR | In the Jewish calendar, the sixth civil and twelfth religious month of the year, usually falling within February and March (4) |
| TEVET | In Judaism, the fourth month of the civil year and 10th month of the ecclesiastical year (5) |
| ELUL | Twelfth civil and sixth religious month of the Jewish calendar, usually falling within August and September (4) |
| DECEMBER | From "ten", the 10th month of the Roman year but the 12th of ours (8) |
| BRUMAIRE | Second month of the French revolutionary calendar, extending from Oct 23 to Nov 21; the month of mist (8) |
| THERMIDOR | The 11th month of the French revolutionary calendar; the month of heat (9) |
| FRUCTIDOR | Twelfth month of the French Revolutionary calendar, running from 18 August to 16 September; the month of fruit (9) |
| VENTOSE | Sixth month of the French Revolutionary calendar, coinciding with parts of February and March; from Latin, 'windy' (7) |
| IDES | A day in the ancient Roman calendar falling in the middle of the month (4) |
| TAMMUZ | Tenth month of the Jewish civil year, fourth of the ecclesiastical |
| TEBETH | Gamble to enter the wild in tenth month of the Hebrew religious calendar (6) |
| IISAN | Eighth civil and second religious month of the Jewish year, usually falling within April and May (5) |
| FLOREAL | Eighth month of the French revolutionary calendar, named from the Latin for 'flower' (7) |
| OCTOBER | Tenth month of the year in the Gregorian calendar (7) |
| PLUVIOSE | Fifth month of the French revolutionary calendar (1793- 1805) running from around 20 January to February 18; from Latin, ' rainy' (8) |