A few of the words
- FROSTY
- "Frosty the Snowman" was written by Walter "Jack" Rollins and Steve Nelson and first recorded by Gene Autry in 1950 — just one year after Autry's smash hit "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer."Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- RUDOLPH
- Rudolph was created by Robert L. May in 1939 as a booklet for the Montgomery Ward department store chain, and the famous song came a decade later in 1949.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- BLITZEN
- The name Blitzen comes from the German word for lightning — paired with Donner (thunder), the duo has galloped through Christmas lore since Clement Clarke Moore's 1823 poem.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
- NOEL
- "The First Noel" is one of the oldest carols in English, with roots traced to at least the 13th century in Cornwall and the West Country of England.Find this word in the grid to read its note.
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More about this theme & how to playChristmas songs word search · free, large-print, printable, no sign-up
Christmas Songs: a free large-print word search
Christmas songs word search — free and large-print. Hum along to jingle bells, frosty snowmen, and silent, glittering winter nights.
About Seasonal
Christmas carols fill the air from the first flicker of December candles — voices rising on "Silent Night," sleigh bells ringing through "Jingle Bells," and the whole room joining in on the merry chorus of "Deck the Halls." Many of the most beloved songs date back to the 1800s, yet they feel as fresh and close as woodsmoke and evergreen. Whether sung around a piano, hummed in a warm kitchen, or heard drifting from a choir on a cold night, they carry the whole season in just a few familiar notes.
How to play
- 1Find a word from the list.Press the first letter and drag to the last — across, down or diagonally, forwards or back. Or tap the first letter, then the last.
- 2It stays marked.Found words get a soft teal line through them, on the grid and in the list.
- 3Make it comfortable.Use the A / A+ / A++ size control any time, or pinch the grid for a closer look.
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