English language

How to pronounce sept in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms sep, september
Type of gregorian calendar month
Type Words
Synonyms family, family line, folk, kinfolk, kinsfolk, phratry
Type of stock, ancestry, blood, blood line, bloodline, descent, line, line of descent, lineage, origin, parentage, pedigree, stemma
Has types dynasty, gens, homefolk, house, name, people

Examples of sept

sept
Sept. 11 reminded us of the selfless dedication with which they serve every day.
From the dailyherald.com
Sept. 10 would be his first start in a regular-season game at inside linebacker.
From the post-gazette.com
Sept. 11 will mark the 10th anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center.
From the thenewstribune.com
Sept. 9 could be a red letter day in the musical career of your prodigy-to-be.
From the news-journalonline.com
Sept. 13 is the first of four upcoming deadlines assigned by geographic areas.
From the sacbee.com
Sept. 11 has made it both tougher to cross into the U.S. and ever more urgent.
From the time.com
The coaches went out of business when the price went up to six and then sept sols.
From the guardian.co.uk
Sept. 11 caused many to question just what age of man we were truly entering.
From the washingtontimes.com
Sept. 29 marked 11 years since Andrew Boyd Howard entered our lives and our family.
From the newsobserver.com
More examples
  • September: the month following August and preceding October
  • Family: people descended from a common ancestor; "his family has lived in Massachusetts since the Mayflower"
  • A sept is an English word for a division of a family, especially a division of a clan. The word might have its origin from Latin septum "enclosure, fold", or it can be an alteration of sect.
  • September is the ninth month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of four Gregorian months with 30 days.
  • A clan, tribe, or family, proceeding from a common progenitor; -- used especially of the ancient clans in Ireland
  • Possibly from Gaelic sliocht, 'offspring', pronounced 'slucht', in Irish usage an anglicised term referring to a dominant ruling kingroup (unconnected Irish kingroups could bear the same name, eg, there are multiple unrelated septs of Murphy, O'Connor, O'Kelly, etc, and a distinction should be ...
  • Ember 1901 First official raising of the blue Australian Flag at the Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne. (colourised photo original pattern)
  • Suddivision of a clan, often differentiated by an English or anglicised surname.
  • (n.) an Irish variant of "clan", used to denote a branch of a clan known by a different surname than that of the clan chief or progenitor (the clan name)