Easy Christmas
Christmas Food
Christmas Movies
Christmas Songs
Family Christmas
100

In the “Twelve Days of Christmas”, The singer’s true love gives them five of these shining pieces of jewelry on day five.


A: What are golden rings?

100

Edible houses with candy decorations are made from this traditional baked substance.


A: What is gingerbread?

100

Q: Will Ferrell played the oversized North Pole adoptee who sets off to find his father in this 2003 Christmas classic.


A: What is “Elf”?

100

Q: In “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer,” Grandma had been drinking too much of this festive holiday beverage.


A: What is eggnog?

100

Q: “I’m dreaming of a white Christmas” with every one of these.


A: What is “Christmas card I write”?

200

Q: Children leave this tasty treat for Santa on Christmas Eve.


A: What are milk and cookies?

200

 One of the key flavors in eggnog is this aromatic spice, often sprinkled on top as a garnish.


A: What is nutmeg?

200

Q: In the 1983 holiday favorite “A Christmas Story,” Ralphie’s father wins a lamp shaped like this body part as a runner-up prize from a newspaper contest.


A: What is a woman’s leg?

200

Q: This catch 1994 Christmas tune is the best-selling Christmas single ever recorded by a female artist, as well as being one of the highest-selling singles in music history.


A: What is “All I Want for Christmas is You”?

200

Q: There were no creatures stirring on the night before Christmas, not even one of these.


A: What is a mouse?

300

These two items traditionally appear at the tops of Christmas trees.


A: What are stars and angels?

300

Q: In “We Wish You a Merry Christmas”, the carolers threaten to stay put until they receive this proper English dish.


A: What is figgy pudding?

300

Q: The actor who plays long-suffering Clark Griswold in “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” is this original SNL cast member.


A: Who is Chevy Chase?

300

Q: In his original 1943 recording of “I’ll Be Home for Christmas”, Bing Crosby crooned, “Christmas Eve will find me…” here.


A: What is where the love light gleams?

300

Q: This mythical winter sprite is nipping at your nose in “The Christmas Song.”


A: Who is Jack Frost?

400

It consists of inexpensive foil now, but this glittery decoration started as strips of real silver.


A: What is tinsel?

400

Q: Rather than dining on turkey, the Whos in Whoville in Dr. Seuss’s Christmas classic “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” enjoy this descriptively named main dish.


A: What is roast beast?

400

Q: Jim Carrey’s grumpy green gremlin lays siege to this town in the 2000 film “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.”


A: What is Whoville?

400

Q: In “A Holly, Jolly Christmas,” singer Burl Ives suggests that you say hello to these two classifications of people.


A: What are folks you know and everyone you meet?

400

Q: Popping tubes used in the U.K. to hold gifts and small treats go by this explosive name.


A: What are Christmas crackers?

500

Q: Santa keeps these two lists to track which children get presents and which get coal.


A: What are the Naughty and Nice lists?

500

Q: These are the four major food groups for elves in the Christmas film “Elf”.


A: What are candy, candy canes, candy corns, and syrup?

500

Q: This “Home Alone” character fends off a pair of robbers by building slapstick traps in his house.


A: Who is Kevin McAlister?

500

Q: The lyrics to this timeless Christmas song describe a wintery ride in a one-horse open sleigh, but never once mention the word “Christmas.”


A: What is “Jingle Bells”?

500

Q: In The Twelve Days of Christmas, lords a-leaping appear in this quantity.


A: What is ten?

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