Halloween

Etymology
A Scottish shortening of Allhalloweven, from Allhallowmas (the obsolete earlier name of All Saints' Day) + even (an archaic/poetic cognate of eve).

Allhallowmas can be superficially analysed as a combination of all + hallow ("saint, holy person") + -mas ("mass, church festival, holiday" as in Christmas), but it's actually a direct descendant of the Middle English and Old English terms for All Saints' Day, whose parts mean the same as in the modern expression: and  (literally "the mass of all the saints", from eall, halga, and mæsse).

Proper noun

 * 1) The eve of All Hallows' Day; October 31st; celebrated (mostly in English-speaking countries) by children going door-to-door in costume and soliciting candy with menaces.
 * They all get dressed up in scary costumes at Halloween.
 * 1) * 1987, Kai Hansen, "Halloween", Helloween, Keeper Of The Seven Keys: Part 1.
 * "en"

- Black is the night full of fright / You'll be missing the day / What will be here very soon / Changing your way / A knock at your door / It is real or is it a dream / On trembling legs you open the door / And you scream... on Halloween

Translations

 * Afrikaans: Allerheilige-aand, Halloween
 * Arabic: هَالُوِين, عِيدُ جَمِيعِ القِدِّيسِين
 * Hijazi Arabic: هَالُوِين
 * Armenian: Հելոուին
 * Azerbaijani: Hellouin
 * Bashkir: Хэллоуин
 * Bavarian: Ollaheilignomd
 * Belarusian: Хэлоўі́н
 * Bengali: হ্যালোউইন,
 * Bulgarian: Хелоуин
 * Cherokee: ᏓᎾᎵᎬᏚᎸᏍᎬ
 * Chickasaw: Sholop Inittak
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 萬聖節, 萬聖夜, 萬聖節前夕
 * Mandarin:, ,
 * Czech:
 * Danish:
 * Dutch: allerheiligenavond,
 * Esperanto: Haloveno
 * Faroese: allahalgannaaftan, alhalgunaaftan
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Galician: Samaín
 * Georgian: ჰელოუინი
 * German:
 * Greek: Χάλοουϊν
 * Gujarati: હેલોવીન
 * Hawaiian: Heleuī
 * Hebrew:
 * Hindi: हैलोवीन
 * Hungarian: halovín
 * Hunsrik: Hexenacht
 * Icelandic:
 * Irish: Oíche Shamhna
 * Italian:, vigilia di Ognissanti
 * Japanese: ,
 * Kannada: ಹ್ಯಾಲೋವೀನ್‌
 * Korean: ^할로윈
 * Kyrgyz: Хеллоуин
 * Latin: Pervigilium Omnium Sanctorum
 * Latvian: Halovīns
 * Lithuanian: Helovinas
 * Macedonian: Ноќ на вештерките
 * Malagasy: Halôhinina
 * Malayalam: ഹാലോവീൻ
 * Manx: Oie Houney
 * Marathi: हॅलोवीन
 * Mongolian:
 * Cyrillic: сүнсний баяр
 * Navajo: Doo Hóshkał Bá Hazʼą́
 * Nepali: हलोविन, ह्यालविन
 * Norman: Veil'ye d'la Toussaint
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: allehelgensaften
 * Nynorsk: allehelgensaftan
 * Old English: ealra hālgena mæsseǣfen
 * Persian:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:, , Raloim , Véspera de Todos os Santos
 * Punjabi: ਹੈਲੋਵੀਨ
 * Romani: Dudumêngi-Ryat
 * Romanian: Halloween
 * Russian: Хеллоуи́н, Халуви́н,, Халуи́н
 * Sardinian: Faghide bene a sos mortos
 * Scots: Hallae E'en
 * Scottish Gaelic: Oidhche Shamhna
 * Serbo-Croatian: Noć vještica, Halloveen
 * Sinhalese: හැලෝවීන්
 * Slovene: noč čarovnic
 * Spanish:, Noche de Brujas, jalogüin
 * Swedish:
 * Tajik: Хеллоуин
 * Tamil: ஆலோவீன்
 * Tatar: Хэллоуин
 * Telugu: హాలోవీన్
 * Thai: ฮาโลวีน
 * Turkish: Cadılar Bayramı
 * Ukrainian: Гелові́н, Хелові́н, Відьо́мська ніч
 * Urdu: ہالووین
 * Uyghur: پەرىشتىلەر بايرىمى
 * Vietnamese:
 * Welsh: Nos Galan Gaeaf, Nos Glangaea
 * Western Panjabi: ہالووین
 * Yakut: Хэллоуин, Һеллоуин
 * Yiddish: האַלאָווין

Etymology
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Noun

 * 1) Halloween

Etymology
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Etymology
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Noun

 * 1) Halloween

Etymology
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Etymology
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Etymology
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Proper noun

 * 1)  festival that takes place on October 31st, in which people dress up in ghostly costumes and use hollow pumpkins, with candles inside, to decorate houses, gardens, etc.

Etymology
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Etymology
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Noun

 * 1)  31st of October