Thanksgiving is a time for giving thanks. It was a moment of thankfulness started by the Pilgrims and the Native Americans. To commemorate the first feast Americans still celebrate Thanksgiving today.
being thankful that you are with your family and you get a big meal
I think Thanksgiving is a time where people give thanks for what they have. They also gather family and friends to have a good time spending time together.
Turkeys are the keynote guest at Thanksgiving. At Thanksgiving turkeys are kaput.
Thanksgiving doesn't really have a mascot. I would guess a chicken would be the mascot.
To describe a turkey, you can use golden bronze, juicy, tender, and for the balloon floats at the Macy's Day Parade, you can use giant,swaying,and unfathomable because you never know which way the balloons are gonna blow. Hopes this helps you! ;)
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Could you be more specific? Could you describe the table? On MY table, the turkey is the centerpiece.
A more accurate question would be: Why do you need to abbreviate such a short word?
Thanksgiving is not a Turkish Holiday. Thanksgiving is primarily celebrated in the United States and Canada. They would eat what they normally do on any other day.
People eat cranberries at Thanksgiving because they are a food that would have been served at the first Thanksgiving, which is commemorated on Thanksgiving Day each November. The early settlers would have used cranberries to preserve their meat.
Black Friday is the Friday following thanksgiving day in the united states, traditionally the beginning of the Christmas shopping season. The term "Black Friday" may have originated in Philadelphia, where was used to describe the heavy and disruptive pedestrian and vehicle traffic which would occur on the day after Thanksgiving.
Yes, if not for the extra day in February, Canadian Thanksgiving would have fallen on October 9 and U. S. Thanksgiving would have fallen on November 23.
I would say: 'Happy thanksgiving'. Because Thanksgiving is an American holiday, not a Dutch, there is no specific translation for it.
Canada celebrates Thanksgiving in October on the second Monday.