Good tidings we bring to you and your kin, goes a line from the popular 16th-century carol "We Wish You a Merry Christmas." Another carol, "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" (1833), speaks of "tidings of comfort and joy." Although there is nothing inherent in the meaning or origin of "tiding" that specifically pertains to Christmas (it derives via Middle English from Old English and relates to betide, meaning "to happen especially by fate"), we most often see the word in contexts pertaining to the Christmas season. The most notable usage, perhaps, occurs in Luke 2:10 of the King James Bible, when the angel delivers the news of the arrival of the Savior: "Fear not: for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people."
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Stock indexes opened in positive territory Wednesday, as investors awaited the latest tidings from the Federal Reserve.—Daniel De Visé, USA TODAY, 19 Mar. 2025 But the City by the Bay was not the only one with glad tidings.—Jeffrey Steele, Forbes, 16 Jan. 2025 The elusive founder of Gail’s dishes on everything from the controversy surrounding the quintessential London bakery to laying the blueprint for Ottolenghi’s food empire
By Bridget Arsenault
Photographs by Guillaume Bonn
Air Supply
English Yuletide
Good tidings, dear reader.—airmail.news, 30 Nov. 2024 As tidings of comfort and joy fill this holiday season, my New Year’s hope is our nation finally turns the corner on climate mitigation and embraces the larger umbrella of sustainability.—Mike Gunter, Orlando Sentinel, 3 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tiding
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Old English tīdung, from tīdan to betide
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