Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year!" "Season's greetings, and best wishes for the New Year." “I hope your holiday is full of love, peace, and joy!” "Merry Christmas, and best wishes for 2025."
Openclipart, also called Open Clip Art Library, is an online media repository of free-content vector clip art.The project hosts over 160,000 free graphics and has billed itself as "the largest community of artists making the best free original clipart for you to use for absolutely any reason".
42. It wouldn’t be Christmas without you! So glad to have you in my life, year after year. 43. Wishing you a holiday filled with fun and laughter and very best wishes for a fabulous year to come ...
Good holiday! [ɡut ˈjɔntɛv] Yiddish Used as a greeting for the holidays. [2] Often spelled Gut Yontif or Gut Yontiff in English transliteration. Gut'n Mo'ed: גוטן מועד: Good ḥol hamoed [ˈɡutn̩ ˈmɔjɛd] Yiddish As above (as a greeting during the chol ha-moed (intermediate days) of the Passover and Sukkot holidays), but Yiddish ...
Early on Saint Andrew's Day, the mothers go into the garden and gather tree branches, especially from apple, pear, cherry trees, and rosebush branches. They make a bunch of branches for each family member. The one whose bunch blooms by New Year's Day will be lucky and healthy the following year.
Students of the exile school system are taught that this usage of Tashi delek has roots in premodern Tibet, and that Chinese Tibetans' exclusive usage of Tashi delek for New Year's is corrupt. [7] Tour operators have promoted the phrase, along with khata scarves and prayer flags , as essentialized and commodifiable aspects of Tibetan culture ...
Dry January is the one month every year that sober-curious people consider their alcohol consumption behavior while they trade their boozy cocktails, spirits, wine and sparkling wine, hard cider ...
In the United States (and elsewhere), a Hallmark holiday is a holiday that is perceived to exist primarily for commercial purposes rather than to commemorate a traditionally or historically significant event.