Christmas Music actually breaks down into several groups of songs: Hymns and carols, secular Christmas songs, and "holiday" songs, those which are commonly sung at Christmastime, but do not specifically mention Christmas in any way, "Jingle Bells" being the best example. In the area of carols, some of the most commonly heard Christmas carols are "Silent Night", "O Little Town of Bethlehem", "Away in a Manger", "Good King Wenceslaus" - there are many more.
A virgin most pure
Carol of the Bells, We Wish you a Merry Christmas, Silent Night, Angels we have Heard on High, O Come All Ye Faithful and other Christmas songs.
The correct word in this case would be Christmas carol.
A Christmas Carol was released on 11/04/2006.
First When its lamp lighting time in the valley is not a Christmas Carol and most likely originated in U.S.A. or Canada
I heard the bells on Christmas Day
I think the most playful Christmas carol is either "Jingle Bells" or "12 Days Of Christmas".
Christmas carols that begin with the letter A:Angels We Have Heard On HighAway in a Manger
Yes, most movies do, but yes, A Christmas Carol does have music in it.
The ghost of Christmas future
twelve dats of Christmas
to me it is "a Christmas carol" Bible twas the night before christmas.
a Christmas carol
maybe because a chirstmas carol has to do with christmas .
A virgin most pure
Carol of the Bells, We Wish you a Merry Christmas, Silent Night, Angels we have Heard on High, O Come All Ye Faithful and other Christmas songs.
The original title of "A Christmas Carol" was "A Christmas Carol in Prose, Being a Ghost Story of Christmas," when it was first published in 1843.