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Winter Word Wonders

Section 4
Across
Old English snāw and man(n)
late Middle English: via Old French from Latin arcticus, articus, from Greek arktikos, from arktos ‘bear, Ursa Major, pole star’.
Middle English feverer, from Old French feverier, based on Latin februarius, from februa, the name of a purification feast held in this month. The spelling change in the 15th century was due to association with the Latin word.
Derived from the Greek word chion meaning "snow", and -phile meaning "lover"
Old English ælf, of Germanic origin; related to German Alp ‘nightmare’.
Old English thancful
Down
early 19th century (originally US, denoting a violent blow): of unknown origin.
Old English snāw, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch sneeuw and German Schnee, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin nix, niv- and Greek nipha.
mid 18th century: from Norwegian, from Old Norse skíth ‘billet, snowshoe’.
early 17th century: from French chocolat, from Nahuatl chocolatl ‘food made from cacao seeds’, influenced by unrelated cacaua-atl‘drink made from cacao’.
late Middle English: of unknown origin. The word originally denoted a funny story or remark, later an antic or trick, or a frivolous entertainment. Related to Dutch tuig meaning "tools, apparatus; stuff, trash"
late Middle English: from Old Norse hreindýri, from hreinn + dýr.
Old English Crīstes mæsse (see Christ, Mass).
Middle English: from Old French carole (noun), caroler (verb), of unknown origin.
mid 17th century: from Latin festivus, from festum, (plural) festa ‘feast’.
Old English frost, forst, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vorst and German Frost, also to freeze.