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Winter Word Wonders

Section 8
Across
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.
Middle English (also in the sense ‘accessory’): from Old French ournement, from Latin ornamentum‘equipment, ornament’, from ornare ‘adorn’. The verb dates from the early 18th century.
Middle English note and craken.
Old English snāw and man(n)
Old English cald, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch koud and German kalt, also to Latin gelu ‘frost’.
Middle English: from Old French carole (noun), caroler (verb), of unknown origin.
Down
Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French, from Latin spiritus ‘breath, spirit’, from spirare ‘breathe’.
Old English winter, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch winter and German Winter, probably also to wet.
Old English Crīstes mæsse (see Christ, Mass).
Old English snāw and Old Norse flak ‘loose or torn piece’
a combination of two colonial slang words—rum was referred to as grog and bartenders served it in small wooden mugs called noggins.
Old English ises gicel : of Germanic origin; from the Germanic base of ice + the Germanic base of dialect ickle ‘icicle’ (Old English gicel).
Middle English: from Old French jolif, an earlier form of joli ‘pretty’, perhaps from Old Norse jól (see Yule).
Old English frost, forst, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vorst and German Frost, also to freeze.
early 18th century (originally Scots): of unknown origin. Warm and comforting.