No.
caroling! XD
It can be.To wrap: "I wrap Christmas presents for the holidays."
Verbs are doing words. A verb can express:A physical action (e.g., to swim, to write, to climb).A mental action (e.g., to think, to guess, to consider).A state of being (e.g., to be, to exist, to appear).In the sentence "For Christmas I got a clock" Got is the verb. The past tense of the verb "to get" is considered ugly in the English language. Good speakers of the English language would never use that phrase. We would probably say "For Christmas I received a clock".
The word "wanted" can be an adjective or a verb, depending on how it is used. She wanted Santa to bring her a doll for Christmas. (used as a verb) He is a wanted man. (adjective)
"Present" can be a verb, a noun, or an adjective. As a verb, it refers to presenting something. As a noun, it refers to the current time or a gift. As an adjective, it describes something that is currently in a particular place or situation.
Thereäs a verb missing from your question so I'm going to take a guess and assume you want to know how you say Christmas Music in German Weihnachtsmusik
In the sentence "What I really want for Christmas is a horse," the adverb is "really." It modifies the verb "want," indicating the intensity or degree of the desire for the horse.
No, decorate isn't a noun it is a verb. For example: "I like to decorate the house every year for Christmas."The noun forms for the verb to decorate are decorator, decoration, and the gerund,decorating.A related noun form is decor.
it depends on the wreath you are talking about. If it is the green fuzzy thing on peoples doors around Christmas time, then that is a noun.
Program can be a noun (I went to the school's Christmas program.) and it can also be a verb (The techie will program the computer).
The word "hope" can be a noun or a verb depending on how it is used. Examples: It is my hope that my childen grow up happy and healthy. (hope = noun) I hope she wins the race. (hope = verb)
If you're talking about the Christmas kind, yes. If you're talking about stocking shelves full of boxes, it would be a verb.