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Chrimbo
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Am I the only person who has a violent antipathy to this derogatory, illiterate term for Christmas? I ask this not because of any religious reason, merely out of concern for ignorance and disrespect which may be caused to others.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's Christmas without the 'Christ' which is about right for the majority of people.
I personally just think it's a nice bit of holiday with some presents and a few drinking sessions but then I don't love Jesus and if people want to love Jesus then they can have a proper Crimbo in their own special way.
I personally just think it's a nice bit of holiday with some presents and a few drinking sessions but then I don't love Jesus and if people want to love Jesus then they can have a proper Crimbo in their own special way.
Crimbo doesn't have the H of Christmas (not in my book) - at least Xmas ((which I too dislike) has the X-Chi from the Greek, but I don't like the shorthand. Crimbo - to me - just means the commercial side of Christmas, I don't like the expression at all. I acknowledge the religious significance many have for Christmas and I don't think it's right to jazz it up or dumb it down - we don't say Happy Hanniko! or Eidbo! or Diwalibo! for Jews or Muslims or Sikhs.
This is an interesting derivation, possibly from Bo Selecta, hence the Bo? http://www.thinkypedia.com/question/52821/
well, it's been Xmas for years, with only minor mutterings of discontent. I don't say "crimbo" because it sounds like trying to be down wid da yoof, and I don't do that. But, like many pious scribes before me, I do occasionally shorten it to Xmas in writing. (And 'Christmas' itself is a shortened form, in both written and spoken English.)