Easter
Easter (ēs"tẽr) , noun
[Anglo-Saxon eáster, eástran, paschal feast, Easter; akin to German ostern; from Anglo-Saxon Eástre, a goddess of light or spring, in honor of whom a festival was celebrated in April; whence this month was called in Anglo-Saxon Eástermōnae. From the root of English east. See East.]
Easter is used either adjectively or as the first element of a compound; as, Easter day or Easter-day, Easter Sunday, Easter week, Easter gifts, Easter eggs.
Easter day, on which the rest of the movable feasts depend, is always the first Sunday after the fourteenth day of the calendar moon which (fourteenth day) falls on, or next after, the 21st of March, according to the rules laid down for the construction of the calendar; so that if the fourteenth day happen on a Sunday, Easter day is the Sunday after.
Collocations (2)
Easter , intransitive verb