several Christmas Activities for Elementary School, ready to print and apply in the classroom or as a homework assignment.
Celebrated annually on December 25th, Christmas is a date long awaited by everyone and especially by children. This day celebrates the birth of the baby Jesus.
Index
Art:
It's Christmas in the World! Discover and complete the sentences with the words below:
See also:
Jesus was born! It's Christmas!…
I recommend: 6 Christmas activities.
The Bells:
Merry Christmas
Help Santa complete the words using the vowels:
Choose the words that most remember Christmas in your home from the teacher's Christmas list and write them below:
Always thinking of making it easy for you, we decided to make the "Christmas Activities for Elementary School" shown above in PDF. To access it is very simple, check out the link below and download:
1) Tupiniquim Christmas tree. The first Christmas tree assembled in Brazil was in 1909, in Rio Grande do Norte.
2) Ring the bell, in English. Jingle Bells, traditional Christmas song, was also the first song sung in the space, on December 16, 1965.
3) Who had the idea? The Christmas tree may even have been a creation of Germany, according to one theory, but it was the English who popularized the traditional symbol. It is estimated that the English came into contact with the tradition of assembling the tree around Christmas time in 1850, when Queen Victoria was setting up huge trees in her vacation home on Isle Wight. Afterwards, the British population began to imitate them.
4) Lights on the tree. It was Edward Johnson, assistant to Thomas Edison, the inventor of the electric light, who came up with the idea, in 1882, to put little lights on Christmas trees. The population can only buy the lights, however, from 1890, in the United States, when they were mass produced.
5) Mass of the Rooster. Taking a rooster to a religious act was a custom in Portugal, Spain and even in Brazil. If the animal sang, that would be a positive sign for the coming year.
6) Joyeux Noël. The phrase 'Merry Christmas' may be quite different in other languages, but among Latin derivatives, it is very similar: in French, Joyeux Noël; in Spanish: Feliz Navidad; in Italian: Buon Natale.
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