Yule: [OE] Old English gēol, the ancestor of modern English Yule, was originally the name of a pre-Christian mid-winter festival, but it later came to be applied to ‘Christmas’. It was related to Old Norse jól ‘mid-winter festival’ (possible source of English jolly), but where it ultimately came from is not known. It has been speculated that it may be descended from the Indo- European base *qwelo- ‘go round’ (source of English cycle and wheel), in which case it would denote etymologically the ‘turn’ of the year.
yule (n.)
Old English geol, geola "Christmas Day, Christmastide," from Old Norse jol (plural), a heathen feast, later taken over by Christianity, of unknown origin.
The Old English (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. Old Norse jol seems to have been borrowed in Old French as jolif, hence Modern French joli "pretty, nice," originally "festive" (see jolly).
实用例句
1. A green Christmas [ Yule, winter ] makes a fat churchyard.
((谚 ) )暖和而不下雪的圣诞节 ( 人容易生病)会有很多人死亡.
来自辞典例句
2. Yule sat behind a desk, reading The Wall Street Journal.
于尔先生坐在办公桌后面看《华尔街日报》.
来自互联网
3. A green Yule and a white Pasch make a fat churchyard.
冬寒春暖,丧事频繁.
来自互联网
4. Immigrants brought the Yule Log tradition to the U.S.
移民者把圣诞点材的传统传入美国.
来自互联网
5. Christmas is an adaptation of the Pagan feast of Yule.