Yule

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Dr. Goodword
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Yule

Postby Dr. Goodword » Fri Dec 24, 2021 5:24 pm

• Yule •


Pronunciation: 'yu-wêl • Hear it!

Part of Word History:: Noun, proper

Meaning: Christmas, Noel.

Notes: Dictionaries disagree as to whether this word should be capitalized. The Oxford English and Merriam-Webster dictionaries list it uncapitalized; the American Heritage and most others capitalize it. Since it is the name of a holiday, we think it should be capitalized. The period around Yule is Yuletide, paralleling Christmastide, using the original meaning of tide, "time".

Image

In Play: Before the advent of central heating and climate control, when renewable wood was the primary fuel for heating homes, the biggest of the logs cut for winter heating was saved for Christmas: the Yule log. It would make the room on Christmas day the warmest of the winter and the log would burn the longest.

Word History: Today's Good Word was passed down to us from Old English geól, the predecessor of Christmas, which replaced it in the 12th century. It originally referred to a heathen Winter Solstice feast. The Old Norse (Viking) correlate of this word, jól, may well have been borrowed by late Latin and formed into an adjective jol-ivus, If so, it would explain the Old French word jolif "gay, festive", which today is joli "nice, pretty". Jolif was then borrowed back by Middle English which converted it to jolly, as in, coincidentally, Jolly Old Saint Nicholas. (We wish an especially happy Yule to Rodger Collins for suggesting such a seasonally Good Word.)

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Slava
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Re: Yule

Postby Slava » Sun Jan 07, 2024 9:09 am

It's Orthodox Christmas today, so I'll use an unanswered Christmas message to wish anyone out there who celebrates it a great day!

С Рождеством Христовым!
Life is like playing chess with chessmen who each have thoughts and feelings and motives of their own.


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