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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWish DUers a Merry Christmas from a country of your ancestors or any country. You can use Google. Post the greeting and
Last edited Sat Dec 14, 2024, 06:30 PM - Edit history (2)
Then the country/region it is from. I will start. Try to keep to the left.
debm55
(41,003 posts)ProfessorGAC
(71,321 posts)75% Sicilian 25% Calabrese here.
I'll add buon anno!
debm55
(41,003 posts)Freddie
(9,771 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)hlthe2b
(107,537 posts)and German: "Fröhliche Weihnachten" (there are many ways to say it, but I remember this one which translates to Joyful Christmas.
debm55
(41,003 posts)regnaD kciN
(26,698 posts)or З Калядамі - Belarus
(My father's side of the family emigrated from what appears to now be Belarus, but was part of Russia at the time. Of course, they were Jewish, but it seems too weird to post "Merry Christmas" in Yiddish.)
debm55
(41,003 posts)Thunderbeast
(3,583 posts)Калядамі
My grandparents lived in a shtetl named Divin near Brest.
debm55
(41,003 posts)LuckyCharms
(19,408 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Glorfindel
(10,037 posts)God rest you merry, gentlemen.
debm55
(41,003 posts)CanonRay
(15,008 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Fla Dem
(26,153 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)KitFox
(155 posts)Blessings of Christmas. Ireland
debm55
(41,003 posts)justaprogressive
(2,670 posts)Scotland.
*reminder holly is poisonous to pets...
Niagara
(10,038 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,937 posts)It did not phase her one single bit.
She was rather ornery so I guess the plant did not dare make her sick.
That cat would sit on the foot of the bed and stare at the dog, who was in the hallway and wanted to come in the room He would not cross the threshold as long as she sat there and glared at him. He would just sit there and whimper.
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)whathehell
(29,982 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)whathehell
(29,982 posts)or "You're welcome".
debm55
(41,003 posts)Clouds Passing
(3,430 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Walleye
(37,239 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Stargleamer
(2,323 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)and yours hail from Sweden--how nice!
debm55
(41,003 posts)VGNonly
(7,895 posts)My grandfather also spoke German. About 95% of my family was from Germany and Switzerland. Some Dutch and a bit of English/Scottish.
debm55
(41,003 posts)Aristus
(68,885 posts)My ancestry is a mixed bag. English, Irish, Scottish, and French. But most of it is Welsh. My Welsh ancestors hail from the Gwynne family.
debm55
(41,003 posts)Aristus
(68,885 posts)What a paralyzingly beautiful country.
It has everything Ive ever dreamed of in a home. Lush green landscapes, entrancing mists, frequent rain, and friendly people who are proud of their often off-putting environment.
I have all of that in Washington State. But I would have it squared in Wales. Maybe Ill retire there.
debm55
(41,003 posts)Aristus
(68,885 posts)n/t
CTyankee
(65,513 posts)His dad was a strict Baptist preacher and daddy didn't want to be baptized (dunked) at age 14 so he had to leave home when he graduated from high school. He came to Dallas where he met my mother and where I was born.
debm55
(41,003 posts)Aristus
(68,885 posts)But he was the non-Welsh side of my family.
Wicked Blue
(6,984 posts)Estonia
Rõõmsaid Jõulupühi
There's supposed to be a tilde over the o's
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Clouds Passing
(3,430 posts)From a fellow Estonian (& Swede)
Wicked Blue
(6,984 posts)Ma elan Lakewoodi Eesti Maja ligidal. Kust olete pa"rit?
Clouds Passing
(3,430 posts)Ma elan New Mexicos. Ühel aastal mängisin oma kirikus Santa Lucia't. Minu vanaema kolis Eestist Sedenisse
I used a translator.
Wicked Blue
(6,984 posts)although I was born in the U.S. My parents spoke English, but figured I'd pick it up fast in school.
Years of Estonian Saturday school and camp kept me fairly fluent in Estonian.
Lakewood is in NJ, btw.
Clouds Passing
(3,430 posts)as a child.
Deuxcents
(20,609 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Polly Hennessey
(7,614 posts)Cristes mæsse
The noun Christmas, deriving from the Old English Cristes mæsse (the mass or festival of Christ), took hold only in the early twelfth century.
Otherwise, Happy 🎄 Christmas 🎄
debm55
(41,003 posts)Deuxcents
(20,609 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(6,968 posts)French and Irish.
debm55
(41,003 posts)wnylib
(25,183 posts)Frohi Wienachte -- Berndeutsch (Bern Swiss German)
Happy Christmas -- England
debm55
(41,003 posts)wnylib
(25,183 posts)My father's family had German Swiss from Bern on one side and English on the other. But those English ancestors were Puritans who did not celebrate Christmas because they thought it had too many Pagan customs.
Funny, true story about a German Swiss ancestor named Gottlieb Herd. My aunt could not find him at first in census records when doing a genealogy search, because the census taker did not understand his accent. When she found him, he was listed as Cutlip Hurt, from Bear, Germany.
I guess your lip would hurt if it was cut by a German bear.
BTW, there is no Bear, Germany. But Bern in German sounds like bear with an "n" at the end. Great grandpa apparently said he was German from Bern.
yellowdogintexas
(22,937 posts)wnylib
(25,183 posts)I haven't traced them farther back than that.
But I did look up more info on the German Swiss. They have a different dialect than German in Austria or Germany. The dialect in Bern (both the city and their equivalent of the county by the same name) is different from the rest of Swiss German speakers. Bern Swiss even has its own name, Bernese. I guess being separated by mountains creates a variety of speaking patterns.
Mad_Dem_X
(9,840 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Diamond_Dog
(35,639 posts)Wesołych Świąt - Polish
Frohe Weihnachten - German
debm55
(41,003 posts)MiHale
(11,088 posts)50/50 blend.
debm55
(41,003 posts)greatauntoftriplets
(177,168 posts)Joyeux Noel -- French
Nollaig Shona duit -- Irish
debm55
(41,003 posts)catbyte
(36,207 posts)Joyeux Noël (France)
Nollaig Shona (Ireland)
I'm a mutt.
debm55
(41,003 posts)LakeArenal
(29,917 posts)?si=wEf7JrsGS-QIdbEW
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)endless summer
(55 posts)from my other ancestors, Merikurisumasu, Japan, and Merry Christmas, England
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)sarge43
(29,169 posts)From all my British ancestors:
Nollaig Shona Dhuit: Irish
Nollaig Chridheil: Scot Gaelic
Nadlig Llawen: Welsh
Merry Christmas, debm53
debm55
(41,003 posts)livetohike
(23,153 posts)🎄🎅🏻
debm55
(41,003 posts)ReRe
(11,057 posts)England. Actually British Isles (England, Scotland & Ireland), but I don't know the Irish or Scottish greetings.
Oh heck, also German and French, and don't know those either. Have studied "me" way back.
debm55
(41,003 posts)Different Drummer
(8,939 posts)Nollaig Shona Dhuit--Irish
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)Deep State Witch
(11,550 posts)I'm Croatian on my mother's side and German on my father's.
debm55
(41,003 posts)snacker
(3,633 posts)Belgium in the Walloon region
debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)electric_blue68
(19,584 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)debm55
(41,003 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,937 posts)Everything else seems to be British Isles in one form or another.
So I looked up for Switzerland:
There are different ways to say "Merry Christmas" in Switzerland, depending on the official language spoken in that region:
Swiss German: Schöni Wiehnachte or Fröhliche Weihnachten (this is probably the correct one since my Swiss ancestors were from the Bern area)
French: Joyeux Noël
Italian: Buon Natale
Romansh: Bellas festas da Nadal
Happy ChrismaHannaKwanzica to all!