You've got this one slightly confused...
There is Yule tide, which happens at about Christmas time, this is a paganistic festival which is a way of ending the year, in hope that a new year will come. Kind of a funeral and birth in one go.
The 'Tide' in this case is an old English word for time.
Christmas tide isn't a proper use of the word tide in this instance.
'Flood tide' is the expression used for the incoming, or rising tide. The opposite is 'Ebb tide' when it goes back out again. You would have to refer to the tide tables, for the day, in your area of interest. Flood tide is the time between low tide and the next high tide.
I can give you several sentences.The tide ebbs and flows daily.We waited until low tide to look for seashells."The tide is high, but I'm holding on." (From "The Tide is High" by Blondie)
neap tide
The word tide mean befall.
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i am not qite sure but i do know that it was the beginning of Christmas and Christmas eve! i think it revolves on Jesus christ.
Yule is another word for Christmas time. Yule-Tide Carols, or the Yule Log... etc
Yule Yule-tide Yule logs.
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The mood of "The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is serene and contemplative, with a sense of the cyclical nature of life and death represented by the ebb and flow of the tide. The poem also evokes a feeling of inevitability and acceptance of mortality.
the ebb tide
That makes no sense.
GAY. From now on your troubles will be far away....
Yule tide. Maybe, but this has nothing to do with Tidal action.
Time and tide are two things, so you can substitute the word "they" for the two - that makes the statement "They wait for no one." It's "Time and tide wait for no one."If you cannot replace the items by the word "they" and have it make sense, then you'd use the singular form.
The poem "The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow presents an indifferent attitude toward death, as it portrays the cycle of life continuing regardless of individual mortality. The repetition of the tide rising and falling symbolizes the endless nature of life and death, suggesting a sense of inevitability and acceptance.
Christmas eve is the night they had to find Jesus mom to have him, and Christmas day is when Jesus came to earth.