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It's the Most Word-ful Time of the Year!: Joy To The Word: Christmas Terms, December 25

Whether you've been naughty or nice this year, you can still give yourself the gift of vocabulary.
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Full list of words from this list:

  1. advent
    arrival that has been awaited
    Suffice to say, for the first time since its advent, it looks like the College Football Playoff will not include Alabama. Golf Digest (Nov 20, 2019)
    In Latin, adventus means "approach," "arrival," or, in the case of a god, "manifestation." Now it refers to the season before Christmas, a time often marked with advent calendars.
  2. bough
    any of the larger branches of a tree
    And there was life everywhere—zumming insects, squirrels scampering along boughs, birds twittering and hopping about, spider webs gleaming silver in the sun. A Walk in the Woods
  3. carol
    a joyful song
    Try to carol as a grown man and your neighbors will call the cops. Golf Digest (Nov 18, 2019)
  4. chimney
    vertical flue carrying smoke through the wall of a building
    People from New England to Texas are building fake chimneys as nesting spots and migration motels for chimney swifts, little birds that are dwindling in number as the nation’s architectural landscape changes. Washington Times (Oct 31, 2019)
    There's a long history of mythological beings entering and leaving homes through the chimney, many of them specifically at Christmastime. In Latin, caminata means "furnace" or "oven." From there it became the French cheminée; over time it came to mean "a room with a fireplace," then "a fireplace and chimney," and finally just the chimney itself.
  5. festive
    offering fun and gaiety
    Thanksgiving and Black Friday mark the beginning of the festive season in the US, but Walmart workers are not feeling the cheer. The Guardian (Nov 27, 2019)
  6. frankincense
    an aromatic gum resin formerly valued for worship
    The researchers also estimate that the world’s supply of frankincense would be cut in half in 20 years, if current trends continue. Science Magazine (Jul 1, 2019)
    Frankincense is the hardened sap from boswellia serrata trees native to India and Pakistan. It's used in traditional medicine, but is most famous for its compelling fragrance when burned as incense. Along with gold and myrrh — another tree resin burned as incense — frankincense was one of the gifts brought by the three wise men to the baby Jesus.
  7. goodwill
    a disposition to kindness and compassion
    Spreading goodwill boosts workplace morale, which benefits everyone, including you. Seattle Times (Nov 27, 2019)
  8. hearth
    a built-in space in a wall where a fire can be built
    The team also found a hearth and pits dug by the site’s ancient residents, containing stone artifacts and animal bones. Science Magazine (Aug 29, 2019)
    At the bottom of most chimneys you'll usually find a hearth, also known as a fireplace.
  9. merry
    full of or showing high-spirited joy
    The packaging is merry with Santa front and center. Washington Times (Nov 22, 2019)
  10. nativity
    the event of being born
    “Celestial,’’ his latest foray into Christmas music, is chock full of reverential religious lyrics about God, Jesus, salvation and the nativity. Seattle Times (Nov 26, 2019)
    While nativity refers to birth, it's most often used specifically to refer to Jesus — either his birth itself, or any of the works of art depicting that event. Whether they're Renaissance paintings or the sculptural scenes installed on church lawns, they're all nativity scenes.
  11. rejoice
    feel happiness
    The first Thanksgiving was not a “thanksgiving,” in Pilgrim terms, but a “rejoicing.” The New Yorker (Nov 18, 2019)
  12. shepherd
    someone who keeps sheep together in a flock
    Rome’s legionaries lodged a ribbon of limestone across Britannia’s north, they cared little if Scottish shepherds ambled south with their sheep or hopped Hadrian’s Wall. The New Yorker (Nov 27, 2019)
    Shepherd is a combination of sheep and herd, and refers to someone who tends sheep or goats. Jesus is often referred to as "the good shepherd" who guides and protects his flock of faithful followers, and that metaphor extends to members of the clergy, whose congregations are frequently also called their flocks.
  13. sleigh
    a vehicle mounted on runners and pulled by horses or dogs
    “There’s a sleigh, too. It’s still even got all its plush on,” Joe said. Miracles on Maple Hill
  14. tinsel
    glittering metal foil used as decoration
    In the corner, a shred of tinsel glimmered with leftover holiday cheer. How the García Girls Lost Their Accents
    The Latin verb scintillare, meaning "to glitter or sparkle" — and which gave us the word scintilla — became étincelle in French. Drop that first e and you end up with tinsel in English: shiny strands we use to decorate Christmas trees.
  15. wreath
    a circular band of flowers or other foliage
    The Portland Press Herald reports the two workers were hanging wreaths on light poles Monday afternoon outside Springvale District Court on Main Street in Sanford. Washington Times (Nov 26, 2019)
Created on Tue Nov 26 15:31:26 EST 2019 (updated Thu Nov 28 13:09:49 EST 2019)

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