Yule

See also: yule and yúlè

English

Etymology

From the Middle English yol, yole, from Old English ġeōl, ġeola (Christmastide, midwinter), either cognate with[1][2][3] or from[4][5] Old Norse jól, from Proto-Germanic *jehwlą.

See also Old English giuli and Old Norse ýlir.

In pre-Christian times, the term designated the two-month midwinter season (December and January). After Christianization, it became a narrower reference to the twelve days of Christmas.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /juːl/
  • Homophone: you'll
  • Rhymes: -uːl

Proper noun

Yule (plural Yules)

  1. Christmastide, the Christmas season, the Twelve Days of Christmas (between December 25th and January 5th).
  2. A pagan wintertime holiday celebrated by Germanic peoples, particularly the Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon peoples, or a modern reconstruction of this holiday celebrated by neo-pagans.

Derived terms

Translations

See also

References


Scots

Noun

Yule

  1. Christmas
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