01 May 2014

What is May Day All About?

Taken from: http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/kidspost/what-is-may-day-all-about/2014/04/29/e2d6056c-cafc-11e3-95f7-7ecdde72d2ea_story.html

For the vocabulary, I have included dictionary links for some key words. Click on the word for its definition.
By — Jennifer LaRue Huget, Published: April 29
So, is your maypole just about ready?

No? Perhaps you’ve been too busy preparing your May Day baskets.

What? Your baskets aren’t ready, either?

Well, you’d best get busy, because May Day is right around the corner.

The first day of May is probably just an ordinary day for you and your family. But for centuries, many cultures have celebrated May Day as the first day of summer, even though May 1 comes near the start of spring. It’s a time for saying goodbye to the long, cold winter and welcoming warmer weather by gathering flowers, singing, dancing and, well, flirting.

Early celebrations such as Beltane in ancient Ireland and Scotland and the festival of Floralia in Rome were intended to improve crop growth and to help livestock produce more offspring. Later they became occasions for people to get together and have fun in the sun.

May Day traditions include the crowning of a May queen (and sometimes a king) to oversee the day’s activities. Children and grown-ups might fill May baskets with candy or flowers and secretly leave them on neighbors’ porches. People were told that if they went outside early on May 1 and washed their face with dew, their skin would be more beautiful.

Probably the best-known May Day activity is the maypole dance. In olden days, people would dance around a pole cut from a birch tree, holding the end of a ribbon or streamer in their hand. The other end of the ribbon was attached to the top of the pole, and dancers moving in patterns around the pole wove* the ribbons into colorful designs. That festivity continues in some places in Europe and the United States, though the pole usually comes from not from a live tree but from the hardware store (or ‘shop’ in British English).

*'Weave" one of those verbs that has both an irregular and regular form. The author of this article chose the more old-fashioned, irregular “wove," which is also the form that this blogger prefers as well. The past participle form is "woven," however, you will also find the regular “weaved” for the simple past and past particle forms.









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