You say ' Merry Christmas' in the UK.
Just as in your question !They tend to say "Happy Christmas" instead of "Merry".Merry Christmas
The UK is a country, but it doesn't have its own language per say. Depending on what region of the UK you might say it with an accent or with slightly different vernacular, but on the whole, Merry Christmas would be fine.There are differences between American and British English but we both say Merry Christmas.
Merry Christmas in the UK; it also can mean Merry Christmas, only a Beatle-ified version.
Nicole Merry was born in 1980, in Croydon, London, England, UK.
Happy Christmas is used in the UK, in North America Merry Christmas is used
Lonely this Christmas and Merry Christmas Everyoneboth reached #1 on the UK Singles chart while Last Christmasonly reached #6 on the same chart.
"Merry Christmas Everybody" first released in 1973 and went to no. 1 in the UK charts
Around 1:00 in the morning. He stops at the UK first. Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas Everybody is a single made by the band Slade and the song was released in 1973. It earned the Christmas number one spot in the UK in 1973, staying in the (UK) charts until February 1974. It has since sold over 1.2 million copies in the UK alone.
Santa will make it to the UK. If Santa lives in the north pole there is snow there all the time. Merry Christmas!
It is "Happy Christmas" in some places. It was originally "Merry", but in England by Victorian times (that is, during the reign of Queen Victoria) "Merry" had come to be a euphemism for "drunken", and Victoria didn't think it was appropriate for her to wish her subjects "drunken Christmas", so she went with "Happy". "Happy" still predominates in the UK and and in former Commonwealth countries; elsewhere where English is spoken (basically, in the US) "Merry" is more common (the US had broken away from the British Empire before Victoria was born).