No. the "mas" in Christmas comes from the word mass, which has no Hebrew equivalent.
mas means festival so the whole word would mean festival of chirst
Christmas = khag hamolad hanotsri, which means "festival of the birth of the nazarene".
mas (מס) is the Hebrew word for tax.
The name Natalie means "Christmas Day" in Latin. It has no meaning in Hebrew, but it's very close to an unrelated Hebrew name: Netali (× ×ª×¢×œ×™) which means "my seedling".
mas is the translation of "worship".
-mas
Not all do, everyone I know has x-mas dinner on x-mas day.
Mas
Christmas can be subdivided into 2 main parts: "Christ" and "mas". "mas" means celebration. thus making its meaning- celebration of Christ. Christmas should be celebrated by ONLY christians around the world. foodmas and dressmas can be celebrated by those who believe that eating good food and buying new clothes are what make up "Christmas."
The word Christmas originated as a compound meaning "Christ's Mass". It is derived from the Middle English Christemasse and Old English Cristes mæsse, a phrase first recorded in 1038.
x-mas
mas