首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
How Americans Celebrate Christmas Christmas is America’ s most popular holiday. Some people will attend church and observe C
How Americans Celebrate Christmas Christmas is America’ s most popular holiday. Some people will attend church and observe C
admin
2012-09-19
47
问题
How Americans Celebrate Christmas
Christmas is America’ s most popular holiday. Some people will attend church and observe Christmas as the birthday of Christ. For others, Christmas is just a day of fun and celebration, a time for family and friends to gather together, exchange gifts and enjoy a huge holiday dinner. Christmas Day will need weeks of preparations. Since the last days of November American homes and stores have been decorated with Christmas trees and bright lights. Schools and churches have been presenting special holiday concerts. People have been going to parties, finding gifts and preparing special Christmas food. For a large number of Americans, Christmas is surrounded by more traditions than any other holiday. Yet, many of these traditions are not really very old ones in the United States. In fact, the nation’s first settlers would have. been very surprised to see how Americans celebrate Christmas today.
People in other parts of the world, of course, have been celebrating Christmas for many centuries. In fact, December was a winter holiday season in northern and southern Europe even before the birth of Christ. And the ancient Romans celebrated the New Year on December twenty-fifth. Some experts believe that is why the Roman Catholic Church set the birth of Christ on that day. Christians borrowed other Christmas traditions from ancient times. In the years before Christ, for example, people honored the evergreen tree as a sign of life after death. For Christians, it became a sign of Christ’s birth. By the 16th century Roman Catholics in Europe were celebrating Christmas with lively parties filled with eating and drinking. Many of the first Europe an settlers in America, however, disapproved of such customs. They believed people should honor God in simpler, quieter ways, so Christmas became a day just like any other day for most people in America’s northern colonies.
In America’ s southern colonies, however, the Church of England became the established religion. Its traditions were closer to those of Roman Catholic Church. So it became common for people on large farms in the south to celebrate Christmas with huge dinners and dancing. And in many parts of America, smaller groups of settlers from other western European countries observed Christmas with their own national customs. After 1,800, all these people began to mix together more and they began to borrow Christmas traditions from each other. Settlers from Ger many, for example, observed Christmas by cutting live evergreen trees and covering them with candies and fruit. By the middle of the 19th century, people all over America were putting up evergreen trees at Christmas. Dutch settlers in New York were most responsible for creating another popular American tradition--Santa Claus.
The story of Santa Claus began hundreds of years earlier. During the fourth century, a Roman Catholic Church official called Nicholas of Myra became famous for his many good actions. Nicholas was made a saint (圣人) after his death and it became common in northern Europe to hold a celebration on December 6th, the day Nicholas died. All kinds of stories were told about Saint Nicholas and the Dutch brought one of these stories with them to America. They believed that each year the saint rode a white horse from home to home. He gave presents to children who had been good, and coal or straw to children who had been bad. Other Americans who lived nearby greatly enjoyed the Dutch celebrations. They decided to make Saint Nicholas part of their own celebration of Christmas. But he got a new name Santa Claus. It was taken from the Dutch words for Saint Nicholas, Santa Claus. The Dutch imagined Saint Nicholas to be a serious, even frightening person, who would punish as well as give gifts. But in 1822, an American named Clement C. Moore wrote a Christmas poem for his children. The poem, called A Visit From St. Nicholas, created a completely new Santa Claus. Dr. Moore described a short, happy, little man who rode in an open sleigh (雪橇). The sleigh was pulled from house to house by eight white reindeer (驯鹿). At each house Santa delivered gifts by dropping them down the chimney into the fireplace. Dr. Moore’ s poem was published in a newspaper in New York, 1823. It soon became popular all over America and it became the source for the Santa Claus American children still believe in today.
An American artist named Thomas Nast also played a part in creating Santa Claus. Beginning in 1860s, Mr. Nast drew pictures of Santa Claus for an American publication called Harper’s Weekly. These pictures showed a fat, smiling old man with a red nose and white beard. He was dressed in a red suit with white fur and a black belt. Today, more than one hundred years later, that same Santa Claus can be seen everywhere at Christmas time.
As Santa Claus became more popular, so did the custom of giving gifts on Christmas. Early in the 19th century, American schoolteachers liked to reward good students by giving them small books. Soon some storeowners were making special books for the Christmas holidays. And by the 1850s, jewelers, toy makers, bakers and others were selling all kinds of special products at Christmas. By the 1860s, more than half the American states had made Christmas a legal holi day. Since that time, it has continued to grow into a bigger and bigger celebration. Some people say that Americans pay too much attention to Christmas. They say this interferes with the religious freedom of those who are not Christians. Some people, for example, believe that Christmas religious music should not be sung in public schools. They say this is unfair to children whose families do not believe in Christ. Because of such criticism, many public schools now permit students to sing only Christmas songs that are not religious and they also observe the holiday season by teaching students about a Jewish celebration that takes place near Christmas time.
In America, settlers from Germany celebrated Christmas by cutting live evergreen trees and covering them with candles and fruit.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
A
解析
这是过去美国的移民们如何过圣诞节的表述,可定位于第三段。根据第三段倒数第三句Settlers from Germany,for example,observed Christmas by cutting live evergreen trees and covering them with candies and fruit可判断本题答案为[Y]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/Ae57777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Somepeoplesaythatifyouwanttogointotherecordingbusiness,"It’snotwhatyouknow,butwhoyouknow,thatmatters."My
Somepeoplesaythatifyouwanttogointotherecordingbusiness,"It’snotwhatyouknow,butwhoyouknow,thatmatters."My
Careerplanningdoesnotnecessarilyfollowroutineorlogicalsteps.Eachofusplacesweightondifferentfactorsandmaycons
Careerplanningdoesnotnecessarilyfollowroutineorlogicalsteps.Eachofusplacesweightondifferentfactorsandmaycons
A、May29th.B、June29th.C、July29th.D、August29th.B数字计算。既然要求入学者在学期开始两个月之前申请,那么八月份学期开始的话,自然是截止到六月份。
A、Italianpeople.B、Germanpeople.C、Britishpeople.D、Frenchpeople.D
A、Themanenjoystravelingbycar.B、Themanlivesfarfromthesubway.C、Themanisgoodatdriving.D、Themanusedtoownaca
A、Picturetaking.B、Memory.C、Languagelearning.D、Poemwriting.B主旨题。本文介绍记忆力。通过浏览选项可知,本题考的可能是事实判断题或者推理题,这就要求考生在听录音的时候,特别关注选项所示的
A、Amuseumtour.B、Anarthistoryclass.C、Aprintofapainting.D、Awindow.C选项均为名词短语且概括性强表明,本题可能考查对话的主题。男士很喜欢女士宿舍内的一件装饰品,女士说她
随机试题
在中国共产党历史上,第一个明确提出“马克思主义中国化”的人是()
1999年我国对HP感染临床诊断达成共识,下列哪项可诊断
下列有关片剂的叙述中,正确的是()
全口义齿的前牙要排成浅覆、浅覆盖,是因为
女,35岁。颊面部外伤伴昏迷,经现场紧急处理后准备护送到医院就诊,处理中不正确的是
气虚便秘的治法为
下列不属于我国股票场内市场的是()。
正方体ABCD-abcd的边长为1,一只蚂蚁从A点出发,在正方体面上沿最短路线爬至c(c是小写)点,其爬行距离是:
一张纸上画了一只鸡、一头牛和一片草地,要求把这三样东西分成两组,你会怎么分呢?实验表明,美国孩子更喜欢把鸡和牛分在一起,中国孩子则倾向于将牛和草地分在一组。心理学家认为,美国人善于分析不同物体各自的特征,牛和鸡都属动物,因此在一起;中国人则把不同物体之间的
利用虚拟设备达到I/O要求的技术是指
最新回复
(
0
)