Talk:겨울

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Latest comment: 17 years ago by KYPark in topic Year
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Yule[edit]

O.E. geol, geola "Christmas Day, Christmastide," from O.N. jol (pl.), a heathen feast, later taken over by Christianity, of unknown origin. The O.E. (Anglian) cognate giuli was the Anglo-Saxons' name for a two-month midwinter season corresponding to Roman December and January, a time of important feasts but not itself a festival. After conversion to Christianity it narrowed to mean "the 12-day feast of the Nativity" (which began Dec. 25), but was replaced by Christmas by 11c., except in the northeast (areas of Danish settlement), where it remained the usual word. Revived 19c. by writers to mean "the Christmas of 'Merrie England.'" First direct reference to the Yule log is 17c. O.N. jol seems to have been borrowed in O.Fr. as jolif, hence Mod.Fr. joli "pretty, nice," originally "festive" (see jolly). -- From etymonline.com --KYPark 04:56, 25 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Year[edit]

The Anglo-Saxons counted years in "winters." - etymonline

Say "ten years old" -- by A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary

  • tiengewintred
  • tienwintre

Approached from The Sahsisk Thiod --KYPark 13:48, 26 January 2007 (UTC)Reply