Yes. In Hebrew it is called the shammesh.
The Shamash. It's considered the "helper" candle.
During Hanukkah we light a 9-branched candle holder (called a Chanukiah or Hanukkah-menorah). It is traditional to also play with a 4-sided top (called a dreidel). Giving chocolate coins to one's children is also traditional.
The main "event" of Hanukkah is the evening candle lighting. (Every night of the 8 nights of Hanukkah the menorah is lit with one more candle; thus on the first evening 1 candle is lit, on the 8th evening 8 candles are lit.) Candle lighting is done preferably at dusk or as the starts come out. Latecomers can light as long as they have an audience - until dawn. After candle lighting it is customary to sing songs (like Ma'oz Tzur) and play with a dreidel; a 4 sided Hanukkah-top.
a dreidel
It is a 4-sided top called a dreidel
The white string on top of a candle is called a wick. It is made of a material that burns slowly and helps the candle to stay lit.
a 4-sided top called a dreidel
The spinning top played with during Hanukkah is called a dreidel - דריידל in Yiddish and a Sevivon - סביבון - in Hebrew.
On the first night of Hanukkah you light two candles. You always light the candle at the top. This candle is used to light the other candles. Excluding the candle at the top, you light the candles like this: * Day one- the first candle. * Day two- the first and second candle. * Day three- the first, second and third candle. And so on.
there is a wesite called howrse helper and there is a link at the top called objectives click on that and it takes you through all the objectives and how to do them :-)
Hanukkah IS a festival.
The first candle goes into the holder furthest right on the menorah with the shamash (the attendant candle, used to light the others, placed in its own holder which will be either higher, lower or otherwise separate from the others. On the second night, another candle is placed in the next holder to the left. The newest candle is lit first, then the next to the right and so on.