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1 крещенский сочельник
Русско-английский синонимический словарь > крещенский сочельник
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2 второй сочельник
Christianity: the Epiphany Eve -
3 щедрий
1) generous, liberal, lavish (of, with), unsparing, bountiful, open-handed, munificent; boonщедрий на обіцянки — lavish with promises, prodigal of promises
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4 второй сочельник
Русско-английский глоссарий христианской лексики > второй сочельник
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5 крещенский сочельник
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > крещенский сочельник
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7 Nochebuena
f.Christmas Eve.* * *1 Christmas Eve* * *NOCHEBUENA Traditional Christmas celebrations in Spanish-speaking countries mainly take place on the night of Nochebuena, Christmas Eve. These include a large Christmas meal, going to Midnight Mass, Misa del Gallo, if you are a Catholic, and, in Spain, watching the seasonal message from the King on TV. Presents are traditionally given at the Epiphany by los Reyes Magos, the Three Kings, but due to ever-increasing Anglo-Saxon influence some people also give presents on Christmas Day.See:ver nota culturelle DÍA DE REYES in rey* * *femenino Christmas Eve•• Cultural note:In Spanish-speaking countries, Christmas Eve is celebrated rather than Christmas Day. Dinner is eaten before Midnight Mass known as misa del gallo. In Latin America, where many countries do not celebrate the día de Reyes ( see Reyes Magos), Christmas gifts are given on Christmas Eve. This custom is spreading in Spain, although the día de Reyes is celebrated there* * *= Christmas Eve, Christmas Day.Ex. These include opening the children's department at the main library on Christmas Eve.Ex. Christmastide is what is traditionally called the Twelve Days of Christmas: Christmas Day is the first day and 5 January is the twelfth day.* * *femenino Christmas Eve•• Cultural note:In Spanish-speaking countries, Christmas Eve is celebrated rather than Christmas Day. Dinner is eaten before Midnight Mass known as misa del gallo. In Latin America, where many countries do not celebrate the día de Reyes ( see Reyes Magos), Christmas gifts are given on Christmas Eve. This custom is spreading in Spain, although the día de Reyes is celebrated there* * *= Christmas Eve, Christmas Day.Ex: These include opening the children's department at the main library on Christmas Eve.
Ex: Christmastide is what is traditionally called the Twelve Days of Christmas: Christmas Day is the first day and 5 January is the twelfth day.* * *Nochebuena (↑ Nochebuena a1)Christmas EveIn Spanish-speaking countries, Christmas Eve is celebrated rather than Christmas Day. Dinner is eaten before Midnight Mass known as misa del gallo.In Latin America, where many countries do not celebrate the día de Reyes Reyes Magos (↑ rey a1), Christmas gifts are given on Christmas Eve. This custom is spreading in Spain, although the día de Reyes is celebrated there.* * *
Nochebuena sustantivo femenino
Christmas Eve
Nochebuena sustantivo femenino Christmas Eve
' Nochebuena' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
víspera
English:
Christmas Eve
- Christmas
* * *Nochebuena nfChristmas Eve* * *f Christmas Eve* * *Nochebuena nf: Christmas Eve* * *Nochebuena n Christmas Eve -
8 cabalgata
f.1 cavalcade, procession. (peninsular Spanish)la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos = procession to celebrate the journey of the Three Kings, on 5th January2 horse ride, ride.* * *1 cavalcade\la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos the procession of the Three Wise Men* * *SF1) (=desfile) mounted procession, cavalcade2) [de jinete] rideCABALGATA DE REYES The cabalgata de Reyes is a float parade held on 5 January, the eve of Epiphany, in most Spanish towns and cities. It celebrates the coming of the Three Kings with their gifts for the infant Jesus. In the course of the cabalgatas, the Three Kings throw sweets into the crowd.See:ver nota culturelle DÍA DE REYES in rey* * *la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos — the Epiphany parade o procession
* * *= pageant, cavalcade.Ex. The reader is like her: he sits watching the diverse pageant of human thought and human feeling passing across the gleaming mirror of literature.Ex. There was an air of excitement and expectation from the many spectators who followed the cavalcade of vehicles.----* cabalgata motorizada = cavalcade.* * *la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos — the Epiphany parade o procession
* * *= pageant, cavalcade.Ex: The reader is like her: he sits watching the diverse pageant of human thought and human feeling passing across the gleaming mirror of literature.
Ex: There was an air of excitement and expectation from the many spectators who followed the cavalcade of vehicles.* cabalgata motorizada = cavalcade.* * *1 (desfile) parade, procession, cavalcade2 ( Equ) ridepor la mañana hicimos una cabalgata in the morning we went for a ride* * *
cabalgata sustantivo femenino ( desfile) parade;◊ la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos the Epiphany parade o procession
cabalgata sustantivo femenino cavalcade: vimos pasar la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos, we saw the procession of the Three Wise Men go by
' cabalgata' also found in these entries:
English:
cavalcade
- ride
* * *cabalgata nfla cabalgata de Reyes, la cabalgata de los Reyes Magos = procession to celebrate the journey of the Three Kings, on 5 JanuaryLA CABALGATA DE LOS REYES MAGOSIn Spain and Latin America children are traditionally given their Christmas presents on 6 January, the feast of Reyes (the Epiphany). The Reyes Magos (the Three Kings) are said to deliver the presents on the previous evening. In Spain, to celebrate their arrival on the evening of 5 January, there is a procession of floats through the centre of towns and cities. At the centre of the procession are three floats, each carrying an actor dressed as one of the Three Kings “Melchor”, “Gaspar” and “Baltasar”.* * *f procession* * *cabalgata nf: cavalcade, procession* * *cabalgata n procession -
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м. церк.( рождественский) Christmas [-sməs] Eve; ( крещенский) Eve of the Epiphany, Twelfth Night -
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12 святки
1) General subject: Christmas (с 24 декабря по 6 января), Christmastide, Christmastide (с 24 декабря по 6 января), Christmastime, noel, the festivous season, yule, yule-tide, yuletide2) Religion: Christmas (A Christian feast on December 25 or among some Eastern Orthodox on January 7 that commemorates the birth of Christ and is observed as a legal holiday; 2. = Christmastide), Christmastide (The festival season from Christmas Eve till after New Year's Day or in England till Epiphany), Xmas, good tide3) Makarov: festive season, the festive season4) Christianity: Christmas-tide, yule (tide) -
13 höku-nótt
f. mid-winter night, about the time of Epiphany, when the heathen Yule began; a απ. λεγ.: hann setti þat í lögum at hefja Jólahald sem Kristnir menn …, en áðr var Jóla-hald hafit Hökunótt, þat var miðsvetrar-nótt (thus in Fms. i. 32, l. c.), ok haldin þriggja (þrettán?) nátta Jól, Hkr. i. 138 (Hák. S. Aðalst. ch. 15). The Scot. hogmaney, = the last day of the year or a feast given on that day, is a remnant of this ancient word. The heathen Yule seems among the Scandinavians to have been celebrated about three weeks later than Christmas; but the Norse king Hakon, who had been brought up in Christian England, altered the time of the festival, so as to make it correspond with the English Yule or Christmas; and so the heathen hökunótt came to represent our Christmas Eve. The etymology is not known. -
14 JÓL
Noel, Nowell, Noóel* * *n. pl. Yule, a great midwinter feast in the heathen time, afterwards applied to Christmas.* * *n. pl., in rhymes, gólig, Jóla, Ó. H. (in a verse); [A. S. geôl, sometimes used of the whole month of December, whereas December is also called æra geola = fore Yule, and January æftera geola = after Yule; the plur. in Icel. perhaps refers to this double month. The origin and etymology of the word Yule is much contested, and has been treated at length by Grimm (Gesch. der Deutschen Sprache), who tries to make out a relation between the Lat. Jūlus or Jūlius and the Teut. Yule, the one being a midsummer month, the other a midwinter month; like former etymologists, he also derives the word from hjól, a wheel, as referring to the sun’s wheeling round at midwinter and midsummer time. The resemblance of the words is striking, as also the old northern celebration of the midsummer feast Jónsvaka (see below), which was in fact a kind of midsummer Yule.]B. Yule, a great feast in the heathen time, afterwards applied to Christmas (as still in North. E.) In Icel. popular usage Yule-eve is a kind of landmark by which the year is reckoned, so that a man is as many years old as he has passed Yule nights, hafa lifað (so and so) margar Jóla-nætr; for the year counts from Yule night, whence the phrase, vera ílla or vel á ár kominn, to become well or ill in the year; thus a person born shortly before Yule is ‘ílla á ár kominn,’ for at next Yule he will be reckoned one year old, whereas one born just after it is ‘vel á ár kominn.’ The heathen Yule lasted thirteen days, whence are derived the names Þrettándi, the thirteenth = Epiphany, i. e. the 6th of January, as also the Engl. ‘Twelfth-night;’ it is however probable that the heathen feast was held a little later than the Christian (see hökunótt). The heathen Yule was a great merry-making, and tales of ghosts, ogres, and satyrs were attached to it, esp. the Jóla-sveinar or ‘Yule-lads,’ a kind of goblins or monster satyrs, thirteen in number, one to each day of the feast, sons of the kidnapping hag Grýla (q. v.), whose names were used to frighten children with, see Ísl. Þjóðs. i. 219, 220. As the night lengthens and the day shortens, the ghosts gain strength, and reach their highest at Yule time, see Grett. ch. 34–37, 67–70, Eb. ch. 34, Flóam. S. ch. 22. The day next before Yule is called atfanga-dagr (q. v.) Jóla, when stores were provided and fresh ale brewed, Jóla-öl. Passages in the Sagas referring to Yule are numerous, e.g. Hervar. S. ch. 4, Hálfd. S. Svarta ch. 8, Har. S. Hárf. ch. 16 (in a verse), Hák. S. Góða ch. 12, 15, 19, Ó. H. ch. 151, Eb. ch. 31, Landn. 3. ch. 15 (in the Hb.), Bjarn. 51 sqq., Sturl. iii. 127. As for Yule games cp. the Norse and Danish Jule-buk, Jola-geit (Ivar Aasen) = a Yule goat, Dan. Jule-leg = a Yule game.II. in poetry a feast (generally); hugins jól, a raven’s feast, Fms. vi. 255 (in a verse), cp. Bjarn. 36.COMPDS: Jólaaptan, Jólabál, Jólaboð, Jólabók, Jóladagr, Jóladrykkja, Jólafasta, Jólafriðr, Jólaföstubók, Jólaföstutíð, Jólagjöf, Jólagrið, Jólahald, Jólahelgi, Jólahöll, Jólakveld, Jólales, Jólamorgin, Jólanótt, Jólaskrá, Jólasveinar, Jólatíð, Jólatíðir, Jólatíðabók, Jólatungl, Jólaveizla, Jólavist, Jólaöl. -
15 крещенский сочельник
Twelfth-night, eve of the EpiphanyРусско-английский словарь по общей лексике > крещенский сочельник
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