D, many European cultures have had some sort of celebration in late December. Nobody knows who copied what from whom, and "X" is used to indicate "unknown".
If you want to be pedantic, and I do, you could point out that the time of year is called Christmastide, not Christmas, which is just the twelve days at the end, or, more increasingly nowadays, the day at the end, with the tree going in the bin on Boxing day.
Xmas is actually OK for traddies too apparently- the "X" is the sign of a cross. My very traditional mother told me this as a child, and she doesn't allow chocolate in Advent calendars, or a Christmas tree before Christmas day ;)
Ah, but Christmastide starts when the first Christmassy things appear in the shops, and they start playing Christmassy music, like that hideous Slade song. That can be even before November. I think you are confusing Christmastide with Advent.
12 comments:
Is that the flame of British democracy fizzling out?
No, it's much easier than that.
XMAS - what the bl**dy hell is that? Are you too ignorant to use the proper name for this time of year - CHRISTMAS?
D, many European cultures have had some sort of celebration in late December. Nobody knows who copied what from whom, and "X" is used to indicate "unknown".
If you want to be pedantic, and I do, you could point out that the time of year is called Christmastide, not Christmas, which is just the twelve days at the end, or, more increasingly nowadays, the day at the end, with the tree going in the bin on Boxing day.
B, I call this time of year "December".
Xmas is actually OK for traddies too apparently- the "X" is the sign of a cross. My very traditional mother told me this as a child, and she doesn't allow chocolate in Advent calendars, or a Christmas tree before Christmas day ;)
TBH, good point.
Mark, what even the bit of Christmastide that now falls in November?
B, no part of November falls in December. Our tree and lights go up 1st December, come down 31st December (or first thing 1st January), end of.
There are five seasons - spring, summer, autumn, December/Xmas, winter.
Ah, but Christmastide starts when the first Christmassy things appear in the shops, and they start playing Christmassy music, like that hideous Slade song. That can be even before November. I think you are confusing Christmastide with Advent.
B, December is December. I'm not confusing anything with anything.
Post a Comment