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Eastertide
[ee-ster-tahyd]
noun
Easter time.
the week following Easter.
the 50 days between Easter and Whitsuntide.
Eastertide
/ ˈːəˌٲɪ /
noun
the Easter season
Word History and Origins
Origin of Eastertide1
Example Sentences
Hunter cites, among some of his references, Ben Franklin, the Constitution, Pete Seeger, the Bible, E. E. cummings, Bonnie Dobson, an Eastertide anthem called “Roll Away the Stone,” and the birth of his son.
"It is therefore my special prayer this Eastertide that they will be your guide and your inspiration."
Handel’s “Messiah,” after all, which was also written for Eastertide, is performed far more often around Christmas.
This inconstancy of Eastertide has irritated money-grubbing merchants, who long have surreptitiously, indirectly exported the spirited, springtime surge of joy, light and purity felt by celebrants.
But it was past Eastertide, and before Lammas.
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When To Use
Eastertide is another word for Easter time, the period around Easter, the holiday on which Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus.Easter is also widely observed in secular (nonreligious) ways and is often associated with rebirth and the start of springtime, but Eastertide is typically used in religious contexts.Easter always occurs on a Sunday, and the day is sometimes called Easter Sunday. In religious contexts, Easter can also refer to the Easter season or Eastertide. Sometimes, Eastertide is considered to consist of Easter Sunday and the week after. Some branches of Christianity consider Eastertide to last for 50 days, until the day known as Pentecost or Whitsunday.
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