Christmasとは 意味・読み方・使い方
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Christmas
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不可算名詞 [形容詞を伴う時には a Christmas] クリスマス,キリスト降誕祭 《★【解説】 12 月 25 日; 復活祭 (Easter) とともにキリスト教の最大の行事; 教会ではミサが行なわれ,各家庭でもごちそう (Christmas dinner) を作ったり贈り物をして祝う; サンタクロース (Santa Claus) やクリスマスツリー (Christmas tree) はもともと北欧の風習であったが,キリスト教と結びついて発達した; イングランド・ウェールズ・北アイルランドでは quarter day の一つ; 略 Xmas; 【比較】 X'mas は和製英語》.
「Christmas」を含む例文一覧
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Wiktionary英語版での「Christmas」の意味 |
Christmas
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/08 00:14 UTC 版)
発音
語源 1
The proper noun is derived from 中期英語 Cristemasse, Criste-mas (“Christmas Day; season of Christmas; Christmas festivities”) [and other forms], from 古期英語 Cristes mæsse (“Christmas”, literally “Christ’s mass”), from Crist (“Christ”) + -es (possessive marker) + mæsse (“a mass (celebration of the Eucharist)”). The English word is analysable as Christ + -mas (suffix denoting a holiday or sacred day). Cognate with Saterland Frisian Kristmisse (“Christmas”), West Frisian Krystmis (“Christmas”), Dutch Kerstmis (“Christmas”), German Low German Karstmis (“Christmas”).
The noun, adjective, and verb are derived from the proper noun.
Adjective etymology 1 sense 1 (“red and green in color”) refers to these colors being traditionally associated with Christmas.
固有名詞
Christmas (countable and uncountable, plural Christmases or Christmasses) (also attributive)
- (originally Christianity) A festival or holiday commemorating the birth of Jesus Christ and incorporating various Christian, pre-Christian, pagan, and secular customs, which in Western Christianity is celebrated on December 25 (Christmas Day) in most places.
- Synonyms: (Britain, slang, humorous) Chrimble, (Britain, slang, humorous) Chrimbo, (Australia, slang) Chrissy, (Britain, slang, humorous) Crimble, (Britain, slang, humorous) Crimbo, Noel, Yule
- Hyponyms: Chrismahanukwanzakah, Chrismukkah
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[[15th century] (date written), “A Caroll Bringyng in the Bores Heed”, in [Christmasse Carolles], London: […] Wynkyn de Worde, published 1521, →OCLC; republished in Joseph Ames, Typographical Antiquities: Being a Historical Account of Printing in England: […], London: […] W[illiam] Faden, and sold by J. Robinson, […], 1749, →OCLC, page 96, column 2:
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1569, Richard Grafton, “Henry the Eyght”, in A Chronicle at Large and Meere History of the Affayres of Englande […], volume II, London: […] Henry Denham, […], for Richarde Tottle and Humffrey Toye, →OCLC, pages 1140–1141:
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In this Winter was great death in London, wherefore the Terme was adiorned, and the king for to eſchue the plague, kept his Chriſtmaſſe at Eltham with a ſmall number, for no man might come thether, but ſuch as were appoynted by name: this Chriſtmas in the kings houſe, was called the ſtill Chriſtmaſſe.
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1623, M. N. [pseudonym; William Camden], “Certaine Prouerbes, Poemes or Poesies, Epigrammes, Rhythmes, and Epitaphs of the English Nation in Former Times, and Some of This Present Age”, in Remaines, Concerning Britaine: […], 3rd edition, London: […] Nicholas Okes, for Simon Waterson, […], →OCLC, page 267:
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1798 July, “Account of Lincoln’s Inn: With a Perspective View of the Hall and Chapel”, in The Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure; […], volume CIII, London: […] W[illiam] Bent, […], →OCLC, page 42, column 2:
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The lord chancellor holds his fittings in this hall, and in former days, like the Temple, it had its revels and great Chriſtmaſſes. […] The account of the great feaſt in the hall of the Inner Temple, by the ſerjeants, in 1555, is extremely worth conſulting: and alſo of the hoſpitable Chriſtmaſſes of old times.
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1820 January 1, Geoffrey Crayon [pseudonym; Washington Irving], “Christmas Eve”, in The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent., number V, New York, N.Y.: […] C[ornelius] S. Van Winkle, […], →OCLC, page 379:
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[A] great deal of revelry was permitted, and even encouraged, by the squire, throughout the twelve days of Christmas, provided every thing was done comformably to ancient usage. […] [T]he Yule clog, and Christmas candle, were regularly burnt, and the mistletoe, with its white berries, hung up, to the imminent peril of all the pretty housemaids.
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1840 January, Sylvanus Swanquill [pseudonym; John Hewitt], “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year”, in The New Sporting Magazine, volume XVIII, number 105, London: Walter Spiers, […], →OCLC, page 53:
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“Lawk!” says our old granddam, who has taken the liberty of looking over our manuscript while we were gone to mix a glass of water and something. “Lawk!” says she, “how can you write such stuff? Christmas, indeed! you’ve no Christmas now. Do you call this Christmas? It’s more like a vapour bath. Such weather! Lawk, how times are changed! the Christmasses I remember! the good, old-fashioned Christmasses, when there was snow on the ground six feet deep, and poor people were starved to death by dozens, and you couldn’t go out without having your fingers frost-bitten, and coals were at six shillings a hundred, and canals froze up so that you couldn’t get your goods, and the roads all impassable, and daren’t ask a few friends to merrymake for fear of losing three or four of ’em going home in snow-drifts, and—oh, those were Christmasses! we shall never see such times again!”
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1859, [Florence] Marryatt, chapter XXIX, in Temper. A Novel., New York, N.Y.: Dick & Fitzgerald, […], →OCLC, page 205:
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Reader have your Christmasses hitherto been marked with happiness? Thank God for it. […] Then mamma died—and later in your college days, dear Herbert, when you were both as tall as men, but as fond of play as ever—and we used to spend such happy Christmasses, till our dear father died, / “That was our first sad winter, the one which followed his death, for you remember how sadly we all missed him, and we were still in mourning—but the next one was a happy day, for Lawry was so full of spirits—and that was our last happy Christmas. Herbert darling, Lawrence has left the last impression of happiness on my memory—he, who has since broken up our domestic peace, and for a long time spoilt our Christmasses—Heaven bless him! […]”
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1994, Cherry Drummond, The Remarkable Life of Victoria Drummond, Marine Engineer, London: The Institute of Marine Engineers, →ISBN, page 354:
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The last time I saw her was a week before Christmas, 1980. We took down a fat branch of berried Megginch holly, which we stuck in a pot for a Christmas tree, hung with silver balls and glitters. Aunt Victoria looked at it, smiled and unexpectedly said, “Christmas.” Surely she was sitting there dreaming of Christmasses long past: Christmas in the South China Sea, the Christmas lights of Hong Kong, hot Christmasses so long ago in the Anchises under the Southern Cross stars, or even longer ago of Christmasses at Megginch, singing carols round the lighted Christmas tree in the hall, while Queen Victoria’s goddaughter in her starched white dress and bronze shoes had worn the sparkling pendant given her by the great Queen.
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2018 December 19, Tiffany May, “Chinese City Bans Christmas Displays Amid Religious Crackdown”, in The Washington Post, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 19 December 2018, Asia Pacific:
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This is not the first time a city in China has clamped down on Christmas merriment. Last December, Hengyang, a city in Hunan province, issued a stern notice asking Communist Party officials and their relatives to “resist the rampant Western festival.” The China Communist Youth League in Anhui wrote on social media last year that “Christmas is China’s day of shame” and represents a latter-day invasion by the West.
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- (often marketing) Ellipsis of Christmas season (“the period of time before and after Christmas Day, during which people prepare for and celebrate Christmas”); Christmastime.
- A number of places in the United States:
- A surname.
別の表記
- Christ-mas (emphasizing Jesus Christ)
- Christmass, Christmasse (archaic)
- Xmas, X-mas (abbreviation, informal)
- Xtmas (abbreviation, archaic)
- Crimmas (pronunciation spelling, humorous)
派生語
- black Christmas
- by Christmas
- cancel someone's Christmas
- Charlie Brown Christmas tree, Charlie Brown's Christmas tree
- Chrismahanukwanzakah
- Chrismukkah
- Christmas Adam
- Christmas and Easter Christian
- Christmas beetle
- Christmas bells
- Christmas berry, Christmasberry
- Christmas block
- Christmas box
- Christmas break
- Christmas bush
- Christmas cactus (Schlumbergera spp.)
- Christmas cake
- Christmas Capital of the Philippines
- Christmas card
- Christmas carol
- Christmas caterpillar
- Christmas cheer
- Christmas City
- Christmas club
- Christmas come early
- Christmas comes but once a year
- Christmas Common
- Christmas cookie
- Christmas cracker
- Christmas creep
- Christmas Day
- Christmas dinner
- Christmas disease
- Christmas elf
- Christmas Eve
- Christmas Eve box
- Christmas factor
- Christmas fern
- Christmas flower
- Christmas graduate
- Christmas grass
- Christmas green
- Christmas ham
- Christmas Hills
- Christmas holly (Ilex aquifolium)
- Christmas in July
- Christmas is coming
- Christmasish
- Christmas Island
- Christmas Islander
- Christmas Island red crab
- Christmas Island swiftlet
- Christmas Island whiptail skink
- Christmasization
- Christmasize
- Christmasless
- Christmaslessness
- Christmas light
- Christmas-like, Christmaslike
- Christmas lily
- Christmas list
- Christmas log
- Christmasly
- Christmas market
- Christmas melon
- Christmas moss (Vesicularia montagnei)
- Christmas nutcracker
- Christmas orchid (Angraecum sesquipedale)
- Christmas pickle
- Christmas pie, Christmas Pie, Christmaspie
- Christmas present
- Christmas pride
- Christmas pudding
- Christmas rose
- Christmas seal
- Christmas season
- Christmassed up
- Christmassiness, Christmasiness
- Christmas star
- Christmas stocking
- Christmas Sunday
- Christmassy, Christmasy
- Christmastide, Christmas-tide
- Christmastime, Christmas time, Christmas-time
- Christmas tree
- Christmas tree bill
- Christmas tree effect
- Christmas tree packet
- Christmas tree worm
- Cold Christmas
- Coolie Christmas
- dressed up like a Christmas tree
- Father Christmas
- Friendsmas
- Ghost of Christmas Future
- Ghost of Christmas Past
- Ghost of Christmas Present
- Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come
- Giftmas
- Gothmas
- Green Christmas, green Christmas
- Happy Christmas
- if ifs and buts were candy and nuts, we'd all have a merry Christmas
- light up like a Christmas tree
- like a kid at Christmas, like a kid on Christmas morning
- like turkeys voting for Christmas, like turkeys voting for an early Christmas
- Little Christmas
- lit up like a Christmas tree
- merry Christmas
- Mithrasmas
- Mother Christmas
- Old Christmas
- pickaninny Christmas
- Shitmas
- slow as Christmas
- Thanksmas
- think all one's Christmases have come at once
- Twelve Days of Christmas
- Twixmas
- un-Christmassy
- Vlogmas
- War on Christmas
- white Christmas
- white Christmas slice
- Women's Christmas
- X-mas, Xmas
派生した語
- → Afrikaans: Krismis
- → Burmese: ခရစ္စမတ် (hka.racca.mat)
- → Gilbertese: Kiritimati
- → Golin: geresma
- → Hawaiian: Kalikimaka
- → Hebrew: כריסטמס
- → Hindi: क्रिसमस (krismas), क्रिस्मस (krismas)
- → Hopi: Kyesmis
- → Japanese: クリスマス (Kurisumasu)
- → Korean: 크리스마스 (Keuriseumaseu)
- → Malay: Krismas
- → Maori: Kirihimete
- → Marshallese: Kūrijm̧ōj
- → Mon: ခရေတ်သမာတ်
- → Navajo: Késhmish
- → Russian: Кри́стмас (Krístmas)
- → Spanish: Crismes
- → Swahili: Krismasi
参考
名詞
Christmas (uncountable)
- (informal or British, regional) Sprigs of holly and other evergreen plants used as Christmas decorations; also (generally), any Christmas decorations.
- Synonym: Christmasing
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1766, [John Cleland], “Essay on the Musical Waits at Christmas”, in The Way to Things by Words, and to Words by Things; […], London: […] L[ockyer John] Davis and C[harles] Reymers, […], →OCLC, page 96:
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[T]he antient Britons employed for the decoration of their houſes, or, more properly ſpeaking, of their bovvers, branches of ever-green, in invitation to the ſpirits: a cuſtom, vvhich, hovvever the motive may be aboliſhed, is retained to this inſtant. That kind of verdure vvhich is uſed to deck the vvindovvs, and old halls, vve novv, by metonymy, call Chriſtmas.
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1836 March – 1837 October, Charles Dickens, “A Good-humoured Christmas Chapter, […]”, in The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, London: Chapman and Hall, […], published 1837, →OCLC, page 290:
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"Vere does the mince-pies go, young opium eater?" said Mr. Weller to the fat boy, as he assisted in laying out such articles of consumption as had not been duly arranged on the previous night. The fat boy pointed to the destination of the pies. "Wery good," said Sam, "stick a bit o' Christmas in 'em. […]"
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形容詞
Christmas (not comparable) (US)
動詞
Christmas (third-person singular simple present Christmases or Christmasses, present participle Christmasing or Christmassing, simple past and past participle Christmased or Christmassed)
- (transitive, informal) To decorate (a place) with Christmas (“sprigs of holly and other evergreen plants used as Christmas decorations, or any Christmas decorations”).
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1851, Henry Mayhew, “Of the Sellers of Trees, Shrubs, Flowers (Cut and in Pots), Roots, Seeds, and Branches”, in London Labour and the London Poor; […], volume I (The London Street-folk. Book the First.), London: [George Woodfall], →OCLC, page 141, column 1:
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"Then look," said a gardener to me, "what's spent on a Christmasing the churches! Why, now, properly to Christmas St. Paul's, I say properly, mind, would take 50l. worth at least; aye, more, when I think of it, nearer 100l. I hope there'll be no 'No Popery' nonsense against Christmasing this year. I'm always sorry when anything of that kind's afloat, because it's frequently a hindrance to business."
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2012, Robin S. Shapiro, “It’s Never too Late to Play the Violin”, in Touchstones: Essays on Spirituality and Healing, [Bloomington, Ind.]: Xlibris, →ISBN, page 27:
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Haddonfield was completely Christmased deep in December. It was lovely to see the beautifully decorated shops. Huge bows adorned the streetlamps, aerosol snow framed the windows, and people bundled up were moving in and out of the shops as the aroma of spice and clove from holiday candles scented the air.
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- (transitive, obsolete, rare) To bring (someone) Christmas cheer.
- (intransitive) To celebrate Christmas.
- (intransitive) To spend Christmas or the Christmas season in some place.
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1993, Robert D[avid] Kaplan, “End of the Rainbow”, in The Arabists: The Romance of an American Elite, New York, N.Y.: The Free Press, →ISBN, part I (Dream), page 80:
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Christmasing in Khartoum, writing in his Cairo study about the Al Azhar University, overseeing the publication of learned articles about Moslem medievalism, attending conferences and tea parties hosted by his former AUB students, feted constantly in many an Arab capital, and filling up his diary with descriptions of the bazaars of Lucknow and the exotic birds of Asia, [Bayard] Dodge was reaping the bounty of a life devoted to the Arabs and Moslem culture.
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- (colloquial) To subject to Christmas celebrations.
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2008, Tina-Sue Ducross, No Shadows Left Behind, Galion, Oh.: Harris Innovations, →ISBN, page 204:
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"The kids claim they are all Christmassed-out and have disappeared in protest."
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2009, Julia Williams, “Prologue”, in Last Christmas, London: Avon, →ISBN, page 14:
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Christmas muzak was pumping out, presumably to get her into the spirit of the thing. Not much chance of that, when she had felt all Christmassed out for months. Bugger off, she felt like shouting as a particularly cheesy version of ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ blared out. Look at all these people. Do any of them look bloody merry?
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別の表記
語源 2
Short for Jiminy Christmas, probably a variant of Jiminy Cricket or Jiminy Crickets, a euphemism for Jesus Christ.
間投詞
Christmas
- (euphemistic) An expression of annoyance or surprise: Christ, Jesus Christ, Jiminy Cricket, Jiminy Crickets.
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1959, Ngaio Marsh, “On the Scent”, in False Scent, New York, N.Y.: Jove Books, published November 1981, →ISBN, section 3, page 158:
参照
- ^ “Criste-mas(se, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
- ↑ Compare “Christmas, n. and int.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2023; “Christmas, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.. - ^ “Christmas, v.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, July 2023.
Further reading
Christmas on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Christmas (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
アナグラム
- Chartisms
Christ-mas
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/19 16:58 UTC 版)
固有名詞
Christ-mas
- Alternative form of Christmas used to emphasize Jesus Christ.
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1934 December 22, Mrs. W. R. Spence, “Commercializing Christmas”, in The Montreal Daily Star, postscript edition, volume LXVI, number 304, Montreal, Que.: Montreal Star Company, →OCLC, page 10, column 6:
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For several years I have been steadily working against this cult of Santa Claus, which I maintain has converted “Christ-mas” into “Santa Claus-mas”.
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1993 December 2, Wallace Mayo, quoting Al Lauer, “December 5, "One Bread, One Body"”, in bit.listserv.catholic (Usenet), archived from the original on 19 December 2025:
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We need Christ to celebrate Christ-mas. After all, Christmas is His birthday. How can we celebrate a birthday without focusing on the One born? We need Mass to celebrate Christ-mas. Mass is the principal place to receive and give Christ's Christmas love. Without celebrating Mass, the very word "Christ-mas" loses its meaning.
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- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Christ-mas.
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ウィキペディア英語版での「Christmas」の意味 |
Christmas
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/07/31 11:47 UTC 版)
Weblio例文辞書での「Christmas」に類似した例文 |
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christmas
Christmas
on Christmas
クリスマスに.
at Christmas
the Christmas season
the Christmas break
the Christmas rush
Christmas shoppers
celebrate Christmas
celebrate Christmas
Christmas greetings
Christmas greetings
keep Christmas
the day before Christmas
クリスマスのころに.
クリスマスイブに.
keep Christmas
「Christmas」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 1589件
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