Of, relating to, or observed on Whitsunday or at Whitsuntide.
[Middle English whitsone, back-formation from whitsonday, Whitsunday. See Whitsunday.]
Dictionary:
Whit·sun (hwĭt'sən, wĭt'-) ![]() |
[Middle English whitsone, back-formation from whitsonday, Whitsunday. See Whitsunday.]
| English Folklore: Whitsun |
The English name for the Church festival otherwise called Pentecost, held on the seventh Sunday after Easter as the commemoration of the descent of the Holy Spirit and the inspiration of the Apostles. The derivation of the word Whitsun is still unclear, despite a great deal of discussion and argument by experts and others for well over a hundred years. The first mention of the word in English is found in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 1067, as ‘hwitan sunnan daeg’. Whitsun was one of the festivals in the pre-Reformation Church when the biblical story was dramatized to educate the parishioners.
In English tradition, Whitsun has long been a day of feasting and merrymaking, as befits its time of year as well as its religious origins. Medieval church ales, wakes, feasts, and revels survived in the fětes, sports days, fairs, and other convivial meetings of later periods, for which Whitsun was well known, but, in the secular sphere, Whitsun finally lost all meaning when its Bank Holiday status was taken away in the 1970s, and the Spring Bank Holiday created to replace it.
Whitsun merrymaking had a long-standing and proverbial connection with the morris dance, as evidenced in Shakespeare's Henry V (II. iv). Another widely reported custom, which apparently died out in the late 19th century, was the decoration of churches with boughs of trees, especially birch, placed in holes at the ends of pews and elsewhere, and another decorating custom, Well-dressing starts at Whitsun in some villages, and other customs and beliefs have also clustered around the season. Whitsun was one of those times (the others being New Year and Easter) when it was important to wear new clothes if you could. Opie and Tatem list the earliest reference to this in 1626, and the latest from 1985. This developed into a sort of
Whit-Monday, as usual in Manchester, was a great gala day for Sunday scholars. A procession of all the school children in connection with the Established Church, numbering about 16,000, took place in the morning through all the principal streets of the town. Each school was headed by its band of music … The remaining days of the week will be given up to processions by the children of other denominational schools … ‘(Croydon Chronicle (6 June 1868)).
Bibliography
The full bibliography list is available here.
| WordNet: Whitsun |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
Christian holiday; the week beginning on Whitsunday (especially the first 3 days)
Synonyms: Whitsuntide, Whitweek
| Wikipedia: Whitsun |
Whitsun, also known as Pentecost in the Christian calendar, is the seventh Sunday after Easter. Whitsun commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Christ (Acts of the Apostles chapter 2).
The name is a contraction of "White Sunday", attested in "The Holy-Ghost, which thou did send on Whit-Sunday" in the Old English homilies, and parallel to the mention of hwitmonedei in the early 13th-century Ancrene Riwle.[1] Walter William Skeat noted that the Anglo-Saxon word also appears in Icelandic hvitasunnu-dagr, but that in English the feast was always called Pentecoste until after the Norman Conquest, when white (hwitte) began to be confused with wit or understanding.
The name derives from the white garments worn by catechumens, those expecting to be baptized on that Sunday, when infant baptism was still uncommon. Thus it is centuries older than the tradition of the young women of the parish all coming to church or chapel in new white dresses on that day.
The following day is Whit Monday, a name coined to supersede the form Monday in Whitsun-week used by John Wycliffe and others.[2]
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| Translations: Whitsun |
Dansk (Danish)
n. - pinse
adj. - pinse-
Français (French)
n. - Pentecôte
adj. - de Pentecôte
Deutsch (German)
n. - Pfingsten
adj. - pfingstlich
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (θρησκ.) Πεντηκοστή
Português (Portuguese)
n. - relativo a Pentecostes (m)
Русский (Russian)
праздник Троицы и фухова дня, неделя после Троицы
Español (Spanish)
n. - domingo de Pentecostés
adj. - de Pentecostés
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
圣灵降临周, 圣灵降临节, 降灵节的
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 聖靈降臨周, 聖靈降臨節
adj. - 降靈節的
한국어 (Korean)
n. - 성령 강림절
adj. - 성령 강림절의
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) عيد العنصرة عند النصارى
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - השבוע או סוף השבוע של חג-השבועות (הנוצרי)
adj. - נוגע ליום ראשון של חג-השבועות (הנוצרי)
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![]() | English Folklore. A Dictionary of English Folklore. Copyright © 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Whitsun". Read more | |
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