Christmas

suomi-englanti sanakirja

Christmas englannista suomeksi

  1. joulu

  1. joulu

  2. oksa joulukoristeena">oksa joulukoristeena

  3. joulukoriste (monikko) / joulukoristeet

  4. punavihreä

  5. punaista ja vihreää chiliä sisältävä">punaista ja vihreää chiliä sisältävä

  6. koristella joulukoristein">koristella joulukoristein

  7. viettää joulua">viettää joulua

  8. Substantiivi

Christmas englanniksi

  1. (senseid) A festival or holiday commemorating the birth of Christ and incorporating various Christian, pre-Christian, pagan, and secular customs, which in Christianity is celebrated on December 25 (Day) in most places.

  2. (synonyms)

    (ux)

  3. (quote-book)Christmasse Carolles(noitalic)|location=London|publisher=(...) (w)|year=century (date written)|year_published=1521|oclc=1350306438|newversion=republished in|2ndauthor=Ames (author)|Joseph Ames|title2=Typographical Antiquities: Being a Historical Account of Printing in England:(nb...)|location2=London|publisher2=(...) William Faden, and sold by J. Robinson,(nb...)|year2=1749|page2=96|pageurl2=https://archive.org/details/b30412481/page/96/mode/1up|column2=2|oclc2=940187384|passage=Be gladde, lordes, bothe more and lasse, / For this hath ordeyned our stewarde / To chere you all this christmasse / The bores heed with mustarde.|brackets=on

  4. (RQ:Grafton Chronicle)

  5. (RQ:Dekker Dramatic Works)

  6. (RQ:Bacon Henry 7)

  7. (RQ:Camden Remaines)

  8. (RQ:Dampier New Voyage) meet vvith Privateers, vvho reſort hither in the aforeſaid months to August, purpoſely to keep a ''Chriſtmas'' as they call it; being ſure to meet vvith Liquor enough to be merry vvith, and are very liberal to thoſe that treat them.|footer=Used to refer to a period of festivity during a different time of the year.

  9. (RQ:Spectator) I was always grateful for the sum of my week's profit, and at Christmas for that of the whole year.

  10. (quote-journal)|volume=CIII|month=July|year=1798|location=London|publisher=(...) William Bent,(nb...)|page=42|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=eFg4AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA42|column=2|oclc=977832689|passage=The lord chancellor holds his fittings in this hall, and in former days, like the Temple, it had its revels and great Chriſtmaſſes. (..) The account of the great feaſt in the hall of the Inner Temple, by the ſerjeants, in 1555, is extremely worth conſulting: and alſo of the hoſpitable Chriſtmaſſes of old times.

  11. (RQ:Irving Sketch Book) The Yule clog, and Christmas candle, were regularly burnt, and the mistletoe, with its white berries, hung up, to the imminent peril of all the pretty housemaids.

  12. (quote-journal)|month=January|year=1840|page=53|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/newsportingmaga00unkngoog/page/n60/mode/1up|oclc=6560056|passage=“Lawk!” says our old granddam, who has taken the liberty of looking over our manuscript while we were gone to mix a glass of water and something. “Lawk!” says she, “how can you write such stuff? Christmas, indeed! you’ve no Christmas now. Do you call this Christmas? It’s more like a vapour bath. Such weather! Lawk, how times ''are'' changed! the Christmasses ''I'' remember! the good, old-fashioned Christmasses, when there was snow on the ground six feet deep, and poor people were starved to death by dozens, and you couldn’t go out without having your fingers frost-bitten, and coals were at six shillings a hundred, and canals froze up so that you couldn’t get your goods, and the roads all impassable, and daren’t ask a few friends to merrymake for fear of losing three or four of ’em going home in snow-drifts, and—oh, those ''were'' Christmasses! we shall never see such times again!”

  13. (RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)&93;, that he knew how to keep Christmas well, if any man alive possessed this knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us! And so, as Tim (A Christmas Carol)|Tiny Tim observed, God Bless Us, Every One!

  14. (RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)

  15. (quote-book),(nb...)|year=1859|page=205|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/temperanovel00marrgoog/page/n211/mode/1up|oclc=3640422|passage=Reader have your Christmasses hitherto been marked with happiness? Thank God for it. (..) Then mamma died—and later in your college days, dear Herbert, when you were both as tall as men, but as fond of play as ever—and we used to spend such happy Christmasses, till our dear father died, / “That was our first sad winter, the one which followed his death, for you remember how sadly we all missed him, and we were still in mourning—but the next one was a happy day, for Lawry was so full of spirits—and that was our last happy Christmas. Herbert darling, Lawrence has left the last impression of happiness on my memory—he, who has since broken up our domestic peace, and for a long time spoilt our Christmasses—Heaven bless him!(nb..)

  16. (RQ:Christina Rossetti Time Flies)&93;|page=251|passage=Love came down at Christmas, / Love all lovely, Love Divine, / Love was born at Christmas, / Star and Angels gave the sign.

  17. (quote-song)

  18. (quote-song)|album=Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas: From the M.G.M. Picture (w)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Leo Feist|year=1943 (date written)|year_published=1944|oclc=82880525|passage=Have yourself a merry little Christmas / Let your heart be light / Next year all our troubles will be out of sight

  19. (quote-book)

  20. (short for); Christmastime.

  21. (quote-song)|artist=Andy Williams|title=It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year|It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Columbia Records|date=14 October 1963|oclc=498383541|passage=There'll be parties for hosting / Marshmallows for toasting / And caroling out in the snow / There'll be scary ghost stories / And tales of the glories / Of Christmases long, long ago

  22. (quote-song) / Christmas is love, Christmas is love / The love of God, oh that's the marvelous thing

  23. (place):

  24. (place).

  25. (place)

  26. (surname).

  27. (senseid) Sprigs of holly and other evergreen plants used as noun|Christmas decorations; also , any Christmas decorations.

  28. (RQ:Cleland Way to Things)

  29. (RQ:Dickens Pickwick Papers)|page=290|passage="Vere does the mince-pies go, young opium eater?" said Mr. Weller to the fat boy, as he assisted in laying out such articles of consumption as had not been duly arranged on the previous night. The fat boy pointed to the destination of the pies. "Wery good," said Sam, "stick a bit o' Christmas in 'em.(nb..)"

  30. (quote-journal) for Folklore Society|The Folk-lore Society|month=September|year=1893|volume=IV|issue=III|page=403|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=rd1cLIVa1tsC&pg=PA403|oclc=7644078|passage=Two of the girls carry between them on a stick what they call "the garland", (..) The "garland" in shape reminds me of the "Christmas" which used to form the centre of the Christmas decorations in Yorkshire some few years ago, except that the latter had a bunch of mistletoe inside the hoops.

  31. (senseid) Red and green in colour.

  32. Of a dish: having a sauce made with red (ripe) and green (unripe) peppers.

  33. To decorate (a place) with (l).

  34. (RQ:Mayhew London Labour)

  35. To bring (someone) Christmas cheer.

  36. (RQ:Chapman Works)|footer=In the 1st edition, the word was spelled ''Christmast''

  37. To celebrate Christmas.

  38. (quote-web).

  39. To spend Christmas or the season in some place.

  40. (quote-book)|year=1878|page=73|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=RV4UAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA73|oclc=13325172|passage=I've Christmased since those palmy days / In many a varied spot, / And suffered many a weary phase / Of Christmas cold and hot.

  41. (quote-journal)|month=December|year=1878|year_published=1879|volume=XXXIV|page=1107|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=VKnCYu5u42IC&pg=PA1107|oclc=12701169|passage=I have spent Christmas on the Severn, at Sharpness Point; in Paris, under siege, and among scenes of heartrending distress; among the Scotch hills, with Presbyterian severity, and I have Christmased in Normandy, where every tree seems green with mistletoe.

  42. (quote-journal)

  43. (RQ:Braddon Christmas Hirelings)

  44. (quote-journal) will be one of the spearheads of the R. Peat|Harold Reginald Peat list for the coming season, a result of Mr. Peat’s holiday visit to England, where he Christmassed with G. Wells|Herbert George Wells.

  45. (non-gloss definition): Christ, ChristInterjection|Jesus Christ, Cricket, Crickets.

  46. {{quote-text|en|year=1897|author=Rudyard Kipling|title=Captains Courageous

  47. (quote-book) Frederic Dannay, Manfred Bennington Lee|chapter=‘The Time has Come …’|title=French Powder Mystery|The French Powder Mystery: A Problem in Deduction|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=A. Stokes|Frederick Abbott Stokes Company|year=1930|page=269|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/pg000002_20220726/pg000144.jpg|oclc=7761808|passage="I've been tottering on the edge … Christmas!" His eyes brightened with a sudden thought. "How stupid I've been!" he cried at once.

  48. present