February is the purification month, and its name preserves a layer of Roman religious practice so archaic that even ancient Latin writers disagreed about its precise origins. Unlike most month names, which honor gods, rulers, or numbers, February takes its name from a ritual — the 'februa,' the rites of cleansing and expiation that dominated the final month of the oldest Roman year.
The Latin 'Februārius' derives from 'februa' (plural), meaning purification rites or the instruments used in them. The singular 'februum' denoted any object or substance used for ritual purification — strips of goatskin, salt-cakes, branches of pine. The ancient grammarian Varro connected the word to an Italic (possibly Sabine) term for purification, and some modern scholars have tentatively linked it to the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰewh₂- (to smoke, to fumigate), connecting purification to the ancient practice of cleansing through smoke and fire. This etymology remains debated, however, and 'februum' may be a pre-Indo-European substrate word borrowed from one
The central festival of February was Lupercalia, celebrated on February 15. During this festival, priests called Luperci sacrificed goats and a dog in the Lupercal cave on the Palatine Hill — the cave where the she-wolf was said to have suckled Romulus and Remus. The Luperci then cut strips from the hides of the sacrificed goats (these strips were called 'februa') and ran nearly naked through the streets of Rome, striking bystanders with the strips. Women who were struck were believed to be blessed with fertility. This
February's position in the calendar reflects its origins as the last month of the old Roman year. Before 153 BCE, when January became the official start of the civil year, February was the final month — the time of cleansing before the year began fresh in March. This liminal position explains its purificatory character: just as a house is cleaned before a new occupant arrives, the community was ritually purified before the new year commenced. February's shortness (28 days, later 29 in leap years) may also be a relic of its status as a supplementary month: when Numa Pompilius added January and February to fill the unnamed winter gap, the days had to be distributed, and February received
The English word entered the language in the late thirteenth century, borrowed from Old French 'Fevrier' (modern 'février'), which descended from Latin 'Februārius.' The Anglo-Saxons had called this month 'solmōnaþ' (mud-month), a characteristically pragmatic name reflecting the thawing, muddy conditions of late winter in England. The replacement of this earthy Germanic name with the Latinate 'February' was part of the broader adoption of Roman calendar terminology.
The pronunciation of February is one of the most discussed topics in English phonology. The standard pronunciation /ˈfɛb.ɹu.ɛɹ.i/ preserves both 'r' sounds, but the variant /ˈfɛb.ju.ɛɹ.i/ — dropping the first 'r' — is extremely widespread and has been attested since at least the fifteenth century. This is an example of dissimilation, a phonological process in which two similar sounds in close proximity become less similar or one is deleted entirely. The same process affects 'library' (often /ˈlaɪ.bɛɹ.i/), 'surprise,' and 'governor.'
The word 'febrile' (feverish) is sometimes assumed to be related to February, but the connection is uncertain. Latin 'febris' (fever) does resemble 'februum,' and some ancient authors drew a link between purificatory heat and fever-heat, but modern etymologists generally treat them as separate words that may share a very distant common ancestor in the notion of heat or burning.
February's association with love — through Valentine's Day on February 14 — has no etymological basis but may owe something to the ancient Lupercalia, with its fertility rituals, which fell on the following day. When the medieval church sought to redirect pagan observances toward Christian saints, the proximity of the martyrdom of Saint Valentine (or rather, of two or three different Saint Valentines) to the Lupercalia may have encouraged the linkage. Geoffrey Chaucer's 'Parliament of Fowls' (c. 1382), which associates Valentine's Day with romantic love for the first time in English literature, cemented the connection that February has carried ever since.