Word for leaves falling from trees

‘LEAVES FALLING FROM TREES’ is a 22 letter
Phrase
starting with L and ending with S

Crossword answers for LEAVES FALLING FROM TREES

Synonyms for ABSCISSION

7 letter words

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  • #1

Hi everybody!:)

I am seeking advice from you to know an English word for the fallen leaves during autumn (fall). What word do you use to call them when they are on the ground?

Thank you in advance.

  • morior_invictus


    • #2

    What word do you use to call them when they are on the ground?

    …fallen leaves? :cool:

    • #3

    Two words: fallen leaves.

    Added in edit: Cross-posted, but at least we agree.

    • #4

    Thank you for your replies, but my intention is to know their name a little after they fell down. When they are dry and if anybody puts their foot on them, they will easily be broken!

    Last edited: Sep 28, 2013

    Florentia52


    • #5

    Dried fallen leaves?

    English lacks a one-word way to describe this.

    PaulQ


    • #6

    Fallen leaves in a wood or forest are known as «leaf-litter». Despite «litter» usually being negative, «leaf-litter» is not.

    • #7

    Dried fallen leaves?

    English lacks a one-word way to describe this.

    Do you mean there is no word to describe the yellowish leaves which fell off the tree? They are not actually leaves anymore, and they are used as fertilizer. I did my best to explain them, but I am unsure whether it was comprehensible!

    • #8

    Fallen leaves in a wood or forest are known as «leaf-litter». Despite «litter» usually being negative, «leaf-litter» is not.

    Thank you. I think it is the word which I would like to know.

    • #9

    Fallen leaves in a wood or forest are known as «leaf-litter». Despite «litter» usually being negative, «leaf-litter» is not.

    This is either a BE term or, as the linked Wikipedia page implies, a technical term used mainly by botanists and ecologists. (Maybe it’s both.) In many years of extensive hiking in forests where leaves fall and avid reading of hiking publications, most of them in English, I have never come across it. If your audience consists of people who want to use them for fertilizer, maybe they know it.

    JustKate


    • #10

    I’ve heard a thick layer of leaves called «a carpet of leaves.»

    Chasint


    • #11

    Do you mean there is no word to describe the yellowish leaves which fell off the tree? They are not actually leaves anymore, and they are used as fertilizer. I did my best to explain them, but I am unsure whether it was comprehensible!

    The name for the fertilizer, after the leaves have started to break down is leaf-mould.

    leaf mould n

    • a nitrogen-rich material consisting of decayed leaves, etc, used as a fertilizer

    http://www.wordreference.com/definition/leaf mould

    I presume this is spelled leaf mold in AE.

    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 27, 2013

    PaulQ


    • #12

    If your audience consists of people who want to use them for fertilizer, maybe they know it.

    That’s probably illegal in the UK…:)

    Florentia52


    • #13

    Leaf litter does not just include leaves that have fallen in the autumn, nor are the leaves necessarily brittle. It would also not include random leaves that have fallen to the sidewalk or lawn in an urban/suburban setting.

    It is not, though, a strictly BE term, and I am not a botanist or ecologist but am familiar with it. I didn’t mention it in my earlier posts because of the limitations I’ve noted here.

    • #14

    Thank you all for your replies.:D

    • #15

    I remember our local newspaper once produced a fine hanging clause: Leaves in autumn are a hazard for old people when they fall and make a brown sticky mess on the pavement.

    There was a journalist who didn’t know a word for fallen leaves.

    PaulQ


    • #16

    I am seeking advice from you to know an English word for the fallen leaves during autumn (fall). What word do you use to call them when they are on the ground?

    Such leaves, when found on the street or in your garden are most likely to be referred to simply as «leaves» or, more specifically, «dead leaves».

    «The wind blew the dead leaves so that they formed small piles in the sheltered corners of gardens and buildings.»
    «I spent the morning clearing the leaves off the lawn.»

    • #17

    Such leaves, when found on the street or in your garden are most likely to be referred to simply as «leaves» or, more specifically, «dead leaves».

    «The wind blew the dead leaves so that they formed small piles in the sheltered corners of gardens and buildings.»
    «I spent the morning clearing the leaves off the lawn.»

    Thank you PaulQ. You are helpful, as always. :D

    • #18

    Was that it? Or were you thinking of detritus? I have another one it might be if it’s not that.

    siares


    • #20

    I have another one it might be if it’s not that.

    Please post it here then. The original poster hasn´t been online in some time but others will find this.
    Welcome to the forum. :)

    In ordinary speech, not poetry? It sounds extremely weird and disquieting. At least they’ve died of natural causes, unlike the dead spinach I ate this week.

    ewie


    MossMountain


    • #22

    I came here seeking the same word, and, finding that none of you answered my question satisfactorily, I had to ask my dad because, you know, dads know everything. He supplied the word ‘duff,’ which sounds ridiculous considering it has several other meanings, but I looked it up on dictionary.com, and this is one of the definitions:

    organic matter in various stages of decomposition on the floor of the forest.

    Unfortunately, while this is a fantastic word, I don’t think it will really suit my needs for a poem, considering most people are going to automatically think of the slang term for butt. :p Hopefully it helps someone else, though.

    • #23

    Most people don’t have a specific word for it as seen here. Leaf mold(AE spelling) and it is one element used in compost op. Referred to fertilizer. These terms are used by gardeners.

    velisarius


    • #24

    I didn’t know that. For me it will always be a steamed pudding — or something that one is up if one is not very careful.

    sound shift


    • #25

    :D Plum duff, presumably.

    If you slip on these things, they’re not just leaves, they’re «Bloody leaves!»

    Last edited: Oct 17, 2017

    Hermione Golightly


    • #26

    Did nobody say ‘dead leaves’?

    Myridon


    • #27

    Did nobody say ‘dead leaves’?

    Post #16. :)

    • #28

    The word I have always used is «duff.» As in the fire gets into the duff and spreads underground.

    Roxxxannne


    • #30

    To me, ‘leaf litter’ is the layer of uncompacted leaves that accumulates on the ground in the fall and early winter. Once snow and rain fall in the winter and early spring, they become compacted and damp and start to decay. By June they are the top layer of duff, which is several years’ worth of leaves that are less decayed on top and very much decayed on the bottom.

    GuileWeaver


    • #31

    Dried fallen leaves?

    English lacks a one-word way to describe this.

    Sere : adj ~ dry or withered.
    (used especially of vegetation)

    Fall Words

    Words about fall! Fall, referred to as Autumn in the U.K, occurs in the months of September, October, and November. As fall approaches, the weather is becoming cooler, the leaves are turning brown, and Halloween is just around the corner.

    To help you teach or learn words about fall/autumn we have put together this list of fall words and words to describe fall. This list of fall words includes words to describe fall weather, the fall colors, and another fall-related vocabulary.

    You May Also Like: Thanksgiving Worksheets / Thanksgiving Games

    Here is a list of fall vocabulary and words to describe fall in English.

    • acorn
    • apple
    • autumn
    • brown
    • chestnuts
    • coat
    • cool
    • chilly
    • fall
    • falling leaves
    • Halloween
    • harvest
    • hay
    • harvest moon
    • jacket
    • jack-o’-lantern
    • leaf
    • leaves
    • November
    • nut
    • October
    • orange
    • pumpkin
    • red
    • season
    • September
    • squirrel
    • thanksgiving
    • tree
    • yellow

    Fall Words With Pictures And Example Sentences

    Here are some words about fall/autumn with pictures and example sentences.

    Acorn

    Fall Vocabulary - acorn

    Squirrels gather acorns for the winter.

    Leaf

    Fall Vocabulary - leaf

    The leaf fell from the tree.

    Leaves

    Fall Vocabulary - leaves

    The leaves turn orange, yellow, and brown in the fall.

    Chestnut

    Fall vocabulary - chestnut

    I love to roast chestnuts on an open fire.

    Hay

    Fall Vocabulary - Hay

    The farmer gathered the hay for the animals to graze on.

    Tree

    Fall Vocabulary - Tree

    Trees look so beautiful in the fall.

    pumpkin

    Fall Vocabulary - pumpkin

    Look at the size of that pumpkin! It’s huge!

    Squirrel

    Fall Vocabulary - squirrel

    The squirrel is collecting nuts for the winter.

    Harvest

    Fall Vocabulary - Harvest

    In the fall, farmers harvest their crops and vegetables.

    Fall Word Search

    Fall Word Search

    To help you or your students learn these words about fall, here is a fun activity worksheet. This worksheet is a fall word search. To complete the word search, students must find the fall words in the grid and then check off the words at the bottom of the page. For more fall worksheets, check out our fall worksheets page.

    Thanks for reading. I hope you found this list of fall words in English useful. Here are some other resources you might be interested in: Halloween Worksheets, Halloween PPT Game, Halloween Guessing Game.

    You have reached this interesting post as you might be among those who have asked the following questions: How would you describe autumn? What words are associated with autumn? What are words to describe autumn? What is a fancy word for autumn? How would you describe an autumn scene? What are adjectives about fall? Autumn words A to Z? What words describe autumn? beautiful words for autumn? What do you call autumn leaves? What are good words for fall? if so, you have come to the right place.

    Autumn ( also fall in The USA) is the season between summer and winter. It is the season when leaves fall from trees. It is also the season when the days get shorter and colder. The Autumn season is a period of maturity as well as a time of incipient decline when everything turns brown and dull.

    Some terms and words related to Autumn are:

    • amber
    • cozy
    • crunching
    • autumn
    • chilly
    • autumnal
    • rustling
    • scarlet
    • bounty
    • red
    • brown
    • cold
    • flannel
    • seasonal
    • temperate
    • yellow
    • foliage
    • nippy
    • orange
    • russet
    • scenic

    In general, there are various words and phrases to describe autumn or fall in English. In this article, you will discover an excellent compilation of autumn words and phrases that will help you illustrate and describe delightful activities, autumnal weather, and the overall wonderful mood of the fall/autumn season.

    Words to Describe Autumn

    Words to Describe Autumn

    What Are Words to Describe Autumn? Autumn Words A to Z

    Autumn Words Starting with “A”

    • acorn
    • activity
    • almond
    • amber
    • apple
    • apple cider
    • apple pie
    • autumn

    Autumn Words Starting with “B”

    Autumn Words Starting with “C”

    • candy
    • chestnut
    • chilly
    • cobweb
    • Columbus Day
    • competition
    • corn
    • corn maze
    • costume
    • cranberry sauce
    • crops

    Autumn Words Starting with “D”

    Autumn Words Starting with “E”

    • earthy
    • education
    • election
    • enchanting
    • enjoyable
    • equinox
    • eggplant

    Autumn Words Starting with “F”

    Autumn Words Starting with “G”

    • game
    • ghost
    • ginger
    • golden
    • gourd
    • grain
    • grasshopper
    • gray
    • gusty
    • gymnastics
    • geese

    Autumn Words Starting with “H”

    Autumn Words Starting with “I”

    • Indian summer
    • inspirational
    • insects

    Autumn Words Starting with “J”

    • Jack-O-Lantern
    • jam
    • jockey

    Autumn Words Starting with “K”

    • katydid
    • kettle

    Autumn Words Starting with “L”

    Autumn Words Starting with “M”

    • magnificent
    • maze
    • maple
    • mask
    • Mayflower
    • migrate
    • migration
    • months
    • moonlit
    • mushrooms

    Autumn Words Starting with “N”

    Autumn Words Starting with “O”

    • October
    • open house
    • orange
    • orchard
    • outside
    • overgrown
    • owl

    Autumn Words Starting with “P”

    Autumn Words Starting with “Q”

    • quilt
    • quarterback
    • queen bee

    Autumn Words Starting with “R”

    • raincoat
    • rainy
    • rake
    • rally
    • reap
    • recreation
    • red
    • relaxing
    • reunion
    • ripe
    • roaring
    • rustling

    Autumn Words Starting with “S”

    • scarecrow
    • scarf
    • scary
    • scenic
    • school
    • seeds
    • September
    • snuggle
    • soggy
    • spectacular
    • spider web
    • spooky
    • squash
    • squirrel
    • stuffing
    • supply
    • sweater
    • sweet potato

    Autumn Words Starting with “T”

    Autumn Words Starting with “U”

    • unpredictable
    • umbrella

    Autumn Words Starting with “V”

    Autumn Words Starting with “W”

    • walnut
    • warm
    • weather
    • web
    • weekend
    • wilting
    • windy
    • winter
    • wondrous
    • woodland
    • woolens

    Autumn Words Containing with “X”

    Autumn Words Starting with “Y”

    • yam
    • yellow
    • yarn

    Autumn Words Containing with “Z”

    What Are Adjectives About Fall? Autumn Adjectives List

    Autumn is associated with crops’ harvesting, festivals and rituals. Besides, autumn is when animals gather food to prepare for the coming winter. Birds migrate toward the Equator to escape the cold weather. This is a comprehensive fall words list that illustrate essential and common adjectives that best describe autumn/ fall season.

    earthy fall-inspired abundant crackling autumnal
    harvested rustling howling bountiful enchanting
    seasonal foggy windy gray woodland
    hibernating breezy yellow ripe vibrant
    rust-colored red colorful moonlit chilly
    relaxing deciduous wilting crunchy inspirational
    back-to-school enjoyable frosty crisp spooky
    vivid cozy fresh farm-grown fallen
    soggy changing pumpkin-flavored orange gusty
    leaf-strewn magnificent amber overgrown turning
    spectacular cold flannel gold pumpkin-spiced
    unpredictable brilliant rainy raked scary
    comfortable bright colder fireside foraging
    blustery brown wondrous colored brisk

    Amazing Fall Words List: Beautiful Verbs for Autumn

    This list compiles important verbs to describe this crispy fresh, cool weather and activities of the autumn season.

    • hibernate
    • buy school supplies
    • carve pumpkins
    • catch a chill
    • winter clothes
    • change
    • watch the leaves fall
    • crunch
    • keep warm
    • migrate
    • pile
    • cough
    • prepare for winter
    • rain
    • gather
    • wind down
    • get colder
    • rake leaves
    • prepare
    • reap
    • bake
    • smell
    • breathe in
    • give thanks
    • burn leaves
    • reflect
    • see your breath
    • fall back
    • forage
    • go back to school
    • bundle up
    • go pumpkin picking
    • harvest
    • settle into winter
    • sneeze
    • hear the hoot of an own
    • snuggle up
    • study
    • transform
    • watch football

    What Words Are Associated with Autumn? Good Fall Nouns

    Check out this extensive list of nouns related to autumn that will help you grow your vocabulary about this wonderful season:

    • acorn
    • apple cider
    • apple pie
    • apples
    • autumn
    • autumn abundance
    • autumn gold
    • autumn leaves
    • autumn splendor
    • autumn sweater
    • autumnal equinox
    • bale of hay
    • bare branches
    • barn owl
    • beets
    • black crows
    • Black Friday
    • blanket
    • blue jeans
    • bonfire
    • boots
    • brown leaves
    • burning leaves
    • bushel
    • candy corn
    • change of season
    • chestnuts
    • chill in the air
    • chilly morning
    • chipmunk
    • cider
    • cinnamon
    • clouds
    • cobwebs
    • cold
    • cold ears
    • cold nights
    • cold snap
    • cold toes
    • colors
    • comfort food
    • cool air
    • haystack
    • heater
    • hibernation
    • homecoming
    • hoot of an owl
    • horn of plenty
    • hot cocoa
    • howling wind
    • hunter’s moon
    • Indian corn
    • Indian summer
    • jack-o-lantern
    • jacket
    • leaf pile
    • leaves
    • lip balm
    • long reading sessions
    • long-sleeved shirt
    • maize
    • maple syrup
    • maple tree
    • migrating geese
    • moon dance
    • moon glow
    • mud puddles
    • napping season
    • naps
    • nature
    • nature’s palette
    • nighttime chill
    • November
    • nuts
    • October
    • old barns
    • orchards
    • pecans
    • pick of the patch
    • Pilgrim
    • pumpkin
    • pumpkin patch
    • pumpkin pie
    • pumpkin season
    • corduroy
    • corn
    • corn maze
    • cornstalks
    • cornucopia
    • cough
    • cranberry
    • crops
    • crow
    • dead leaves
    • dirty ground
    • elements
    • end of summer
    • fall
    • fall break
    • fall color
    • fall festival
    • fall fun
    • fall season
    • falling leaves
    • farm
    • farmer
    • favorite season
    • feast
    • first frost
    • fleece
    • flu season
    • flu shot
    • fluttering leaves
    • fog
    • foliage
    • football
    • frost
    • ghost
    • golden fields
    • gourd
    • grain
    • gray skies
    • Halloween
    • harvest
    • harvest moon
    • hay
    • quilt
    • rain
    • rainbow of color
    • raincoat
    • rake
    • rustling leaves
    • scarecrow
    • scarf
    • scenery
    • season
    • season of crows
    • September
    • sleet
    • slow cooker season
    • socks
    • soup
    • sparrows
    • special time of year
    • spice
    • spider’s web
    • squash
    • squirrel
    • squirrels
    • stew
    • street cleaning
    • sweater
    • sweater weather
    • sweatshirt season
    • Thanksgiving
    • time of change
    • time of year
    • traditions
    • transformation
    • tree
    • tree branches
    • weather
    • wheat
    • wind
    • wind gust
    • winds of change
    • windy day
    • woods

    Best Autumn Idioms and Phrases

    1. To squirrel something away

    • Meaning: to hide or store something like a squirrel.

    2. Autumn years

    • Meaning: it is often used to refer to the later years in someone’s life.

    3. To be nuts about someone or something

    • Meaning: to be obsessed with someone or something.

    4. Apple of my eye

    • Meaning: Someone who is cherished above everyone.

    5. Golden handshake

    • Meaning: Used in Business English to refer to a large sum of money given to an employee (normally high level) when they leave.  

    6. Old chestnut

    • Meaning: it refers to a story or a joke that has been told so many times that it becomes uninteresting.

    7. Take a leaf out of someone’s book

    • Meaning: to follow someone’s example

    8. To drive someone nuts

    • Meaning: to make someone go crazy.

    9. Turn over a new leaf

    • Meaning: to reform and begin again.

    10. Lost in the mists of time

    • Meaning: means that something has been forgotten because it happened a long time ago.

    ESL Activities Related to Autumn

    ESL Activities Related to Autumn

    1. Reading Comprehension:

    Do you like autumn?

    Hi! I’m Diana and I’d like to tell you about my favorite season: autumn. It doesn’t mean that I don’t like summer, no; I love it because I have holidays and a lot of fun activities in summer. But I also like autumn. It is very beautiful.

    Look at the trees, their leaves are yellow, red, brown, and green. They fall down on the ground slowly and the ground looks like a magic carpet. I like to walk in autumn looking at the trees which are so magnificent that sometimes I think it is a fairy tale. My friends Emmy, Isabella and I like to throw leaves at each other. It’s such a fun! It is sunny autumn.

    People gather crops: vegetables, fruit, wheat, and rye. But autumn isn’t often very pleasant. It can be rainy, even snowy sometimes and cool. Then you have to put on warm raincoats or coats, caps or hats, even gloves, and boots. I must confess that I also like rainy weather. I have a nice pink umbrella and it protects me from rain. I love autumn.

    Read the text and answer the questions:

    • 1. What seasons does Diana like?
    • 2. Why does she like summer?
    • 3. Why does she like autumn?
    • 4. What does she like to do in autumn?
    • 5. What do people gather in autumn?
    • 6. What clothes do people wear in autumn?

    2. Fill in the verbs in the correct form:

     In the garden

    Autumn … (be) a very beautiful season because the trees … (be) yellow, red and brown. Nature… (be) like a fairy tale. I … (like) it for its beauty. But we … (have) much work to do in the garden. I … (rake) the ground and … (clean) it from the fallen leaves. My father … (chop) the dead trees. My mother … (collect) the seeds of the flowers and … (cut) the withered ones. We also … (cover) our roses and … (protect) the trees from future frosts.

    What are the English names for the Four Seasons? Spring Summer Autumn/Fall Winter. The words 🌸Spring and 🌞Summer come from Old English. ⛄Winter comes from old German and Autumn comes from old Latin. 🍂Fall is primarily used in North America. It’s the season when leaves fall from the trees.

    The FOUR SEASONS name origins – Autumn or Fall?

    Season Origin Root Word
    🍂FALL North America The season when the leaves FALL from the trees
    🍂AUTUMN Old French/Latin French “autompne” and Latin “autumnus” became AUTUMN
    WINTER Proto-Germanic The Proto-Germanic word “wentruz” became WINTER
    🌞SUMMER Old English The Old English word “sumor” became SUMMER
    🌸SPRING Old English In the 14th century, this time of year was called “SPRINGing time”

    We have four seasons and they continue in an endless cycle.
    Spring is the season of rebirth and renewal, plants come back to life and some animals wake up from a long winter’s rest. Next comes Summer, the warmest of the seasons, followed by Autumn, the time of year when many fruits and vegetables are harvested. Winter is the final season and it’s the coldest. After Winter comes Spring to begin the cycle again. 

    September to November is Fall in my home country, Canada, and my new home, Japan. Sorry, I mean it’s Autumn. Wait, which one is correct? Autumn or Fall?

    Did you ever wonder why this season has 2 names in English? I did. Have you ever wondered where the season names came from? Me too. I did some research and this post will share what I found out. We will also learn some other helpful English vocabulary along the way. (This is a great lesson for Intermediate/Advanced ESL students)


    Let’s begin with when the seasons happen which is not the same everywhere on Earth. 

    For the Northern hemisphere, the seasons happen in these months:

    Spring Summer Fall/Autumn Winter 
    March
    April
    May
    June
    July
    August
    September
    October
    November
    December
    January
    February

    In the Southern hemisphere, the seasons are reversed.

    Spring Summer Fall/Autumn Winter 
    September
    October
    November
    December
    January
    February
    March
    April
    May
    June
    July
    August

    *The schedule is not exactly the same for every culture and country, just as weather and tradition are different in every country.

    A hemisphere is one-half of the Earth divided at the equator.

    Why Do We Call the Seasons Spring, Summer, Autumn/Fall, and Winter?

    • Spring – Name origin
    • Summer – Name origin
    • Fall/Autumn – Name origins
    • Winter – Name origin
    • Four Seasons Infographic

    Spring

    Spring

    🌸Spring

    Before Spring was called Spring, it was called Lent in Old English. Starting in the 14th century, that time of year was called “springing time”—a reference to plants “springing” from the ground. In the 15th century this got shortened to “spring-time,” and then further shortened in the 16th century to just “spring.”

    Plants are “springing” from the ground

    Plant Growing GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

    Original source: https://giphy.com/gifs/timelapse-plant-growing- QhLi1PvRCMxsQ “no copyright infringement is intended”

    In this quote, the word “shortened” is the past tense form of the verb shorten.
    “springing” … got shortened to “spring-time,”
    Shorten means to make something shorter, this is the verb form of the adjective short. One way to change an adjective to a verb is by adding the suffix ~en.

    Learn more ways to use the suffix EN in English.

    Summer

    Summer

    🌞Summer

     “Summer” came from the Old English name for that time of year, sumor. This, in turn, came from the Proto-Germanic sumur-, which itself came from the Proto-Indo-European root sam- (sam- seems to be a variant of the Proto-Indo-European sem-, meaning “together / one”).

    Proto means – original; from which others develop. 

    Proto – https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/proto?q=proto-

    A prototype is the first design of something from which other forms are copied or developed

    Prototype – https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/prototype?q=prototype

    Proto-Germanic is the original form of the German language. Proto-Germanic is not exactly the same as the modern German language.

    Proto-Indo-European is an ancient language on which all Indo-European languages are thought to be based. *The origin of modern Indian and European languages.

    https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/american_english/proto-indo-european

    Autumn Or Fall

    The word Autumn, like many English words, has come from other, older languages. Autumn came from Old French and Latin. According to the article at Mental Floss dot com:

    🍂Autumn

    “Autumn,” meanwhile, came to English via the Old French autompne, from the Latin autumnus.
    http://mentalfloss.com/article/52813/how-did-seasons-get-their-names

    French and Latin were used to create the English word Autumn. Great. What about Fall? Where did ‘Fall‘ come from? I could see that my work was not done. I had to do some more research.

    Autumn Or Fall

    Autumn Or Fall? I visited the Question and Answer website Quora and here is what I found.

    What’s the difference between “fall” and “autumn“? Is there any difference between the two words?

    Americans (and Canadians) call the period from September to November “fall” because in North America, that’s when the leaves of many trees turn yellow, red, and orange and then fall off the tree.

    From Quora (slightly edited by me) https://www.quora.com/Whats-the-difference-between-fall-and-autumn-Is-there-any-difference-between-the-two-words

    So, Fall is used mainly in North America, but not really in England. I’m Canadian so I often use Fall but in England, the leaves don’t fall off the trees until December. Autumn is the natural choice for the British because the leaves stay on the trees until winter begins. In Tokyo, my current home, the leaves also stay on the trees much later due to the weather.

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    Question Do all trees lose their leaves when the weather gets cold?

    Trees that lose their leaves in the Fall/Autumn season are called deciduous. Examples of deciduous trees are Maple, Oak, and Beech trees.

    Pronunciationdeciduous > DEE-SID-YOU-US
    Click this link for the audio for deciduous.

    Visit my post to learn an easy way to pronounce long English words.

    In Canada, we have lots of deciduous trees so Fall is a beautiful time. In fact, the Maple tree is an important piece of our culture. The Canadian flag is white with two red bars on the sides and a red Maple leaf in the center. Fun fact – Canada produces over 80% of the world’s Maple syrup!

    Maple Syrup

    Source

    Evergreen Trees

    Some trees don’t lose their leaves in the Fall/Autumn season. Examples of these trees are Pine trees like Fir and Spruce. Trees that stay green all year are called evergreen. (They are always green.)

    Evergreen trees are often used as Christmas decorations in the West. I remember traveling out to a Christmas tree farm every December with my Dad. We would cut down a tree to display in our house during the holidays. The living room always had a nice Pine smell during the Christmas season.

    Autumn Or Fall

    The history of common English words is very interesting to me. (All languages are interesting to me.) Here is more info on English season names from MentalFloss.com

    http://mentalfloss.com/article/52813/how-did-seasons-get-their-names

    Winter

    Winter

    Winter

    “Winter,” meanwhile, derives from the Proto-Germanic wentruz. This, in turn, probably comes from the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) wed, meaning “wet,” or it may come from the PIE wind-, meaning “white.”  Either way, the Proto-Germanic wentruz gave rise to the Old English “winter” as the fourth season of the year, and the name for the season has stuck around ever since.

    give rise to something – (formal) to cause something to happen or exist

    “Daily shaving can give rise to a number of skin problems.”
    This sentence is quite formal.

    Give rise to
Daily shaving can give rise to a number of skin problems.

    “Daily shaving can cause skin problems.”
    This sentence is more casual. I would use this sentence in conversation.

    …the Proto-Germanic wentruz gave rise to the Old English “winter”…

    ~ The use of the Proto-Germanic word wentruz caused the word winter to be used in Old English.

    The Old English word winter has not changed, even though much of the Old English has changed into the modern English. Modern English is the language we use now.

    Learn more ways to use Though – Even Though – Although.

    4 Season Names

    Autumn Or Fall? Conclusion

    English is spoken as a first language in several countries. Each country has its own version of some words. We learned in this post that Autumn and Fall both mean the season after Summer, but leaves “falling” from trees has helped a new word to form in North America. Australia, New Zealand and South Africa don’t have a cold winter like Canada and America so I bet they don’t say Fall either.

    Four Seasons Video

    How about where you live? Do the leaves fall off the trees when the weather gets cool? Tell me in the comment section below.

    4 Seasons Infographic

    4 Season Names

    Check out these other great English blog posts!

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