Easter Vocabulary in English. It’s Egg Hunting Time!

An English teaching yak points to a whiteboard that says Easter Vocabulary in English.

Easter Vocabulary in English

Eggs. Bunnies. Chocolate. And the “what does that mean?” church words. Let’s hop through it.

Easter English can be religious, springtime-y, or just chocolate-motivated. You might celebrate it, ignore it, or only show up for the snacks. All valid.

Below are the most common Easter words and phrases you’ll hear in movies, shops, conversations, and holidays calendars. Every term has an example sentence you can steal.

Yak Snark Easter is 20% tradition, 80% “how many eggs can we hide before someone gives up?”

Tip: If you’re not sure how someone celebrates, use neutral language like “Enjoy the holiday!” instead of guessing.

Section 1: Visual Cards

Fast, useful, and easy to remember. Tap “Hear” to practice out loud.

Happy Easter!

Common greeting (friendly and simple).

A classic phrase people say on Easter day or during Easter weekend.

For example: Happy Easter! Did you do anything fun this weekend?

Easter Bunny

A holiday character (like Santa, but with ears).

A bunny that “brings” Easter eggs and treats, especially for kids.

For example: The kids were convinced the Easter Bunny visited last night.

Easter egg hunt

A game: find hidden eggs.

People hide eggs (real or plastic) and others search for them.

For example: We’re doing an Easter egg hunt in the garden after lunch.

Easter basket

A gift basket (often for kids).

A basket filled with candy, small gifts, and sometimes eggs.

For example: I made an Easter basket with chocolate and stickers.

to decorate eggs

Verb phrase (do something fun and messy).

To paint, dye, or add stickers to eggs for Easter.

For example: We decorated eggs with dye, markers, and glitter.

chocolate bunny

A chocolate rabbit (cute and dangerous).

A bunny-shaped chocolate treat sold around Easter.

For example: I bought a chocolate bunny and it did not survive the afternoon.

hot cross buns

Spiced buns with a cross on top.

A traditional sweet bun often eaten around Easter in many places.

For example: We toasted hot cross buns for breakfast.

Easter Sunday

The main Easter day (calendar term).

The Sunday when Easter is celebrated.

For example: We’re having a family lunch on Easter Sunday.

Section 2: Table of Easter Words and Phrases

More vocabulary, more power. Mix and match.

Word or phraseMeaningExample sentenceHear
springtimeThe season feeling: warmer weather, flowers, new beginnings.For example: Easter always makes me feel like springtime has officially started.
pastel colorsSoft, light colors often used for Easter decorations.For example: The store is full of pastel colors and bunny decorations.
to dye eggsTo color eggs using dye (often bright or patterned).For example: We dyed eggs blue, pink, and green.
plastic eggsHollow eggs used for games; they often contain candy or notes.For example: We filled plastic eggs with candy for the kids.
jelly beansSmall, colorful candy beans popular at Easter.For example: She ate all the jelly beans and left the chocolate for later.
marshmallow chicksSoft marshmallow candy shaped like little chicks (also called Peeps in the US).For example: He bought marshmallow chicks because nostalgia is powerful.
Easter paradeA public event where people walk, celebrate, and sometimes dress up.For example: There’s an Easter parade downtown with music and costumes.
Easter bonnetA fancy or decorated hat, traditionally worn for Easter.For example: Her Easter bonnet had flowers, ribbons, and zero subtlety.
egg rollingA game where you roll eggs (often down a hill) without breaking them.For example: The kids tried egg rolling, and the eggs lost immediately.
egg and spoon raceA race while balancing an egg on a spoon.For example: We did an egg and spoon race at the school picnic.
LentThe 40-day period before Easter for reflection; some people fast or give something up.For example: During Lent, she gave up sugary drinks.
to give up something for LentTo stop eating/doing something for Lent (like sweets or social media).For example: I gave up chocolate for Lent, and I regretted it by day two.
Holy WeekThe week leading up to Easter in Christian tradition.For example: Some churches have events every day during Holy Week.
Palm SundayThe Sunday before Easter; an important day in Christian tradition.For example: They went to church on Palm Sunday.
Good FridayThe Friday before Easter; a significant day in Christian tradition.For example: Good Friday is a public holiday in some countries.
church serviceA religious gathering at a church.For example: We attended a church service on Sunday morning.
sunrise serviceAn early morning church service (often on Easter Sunday).For example: They woke up at 5 a.m. for a sunrise service.
ResurrectionIn Christianity, the belief that Jesus rose from the dead.For example: The Resurrection is the central message of Easter for many Christians.
to rise from the deadTo come back to life after dying (religious or dramatic storytelling).For example: The story says he rose from the dead on the third day.
Easter MondayThe Monday after Easter; a holiday in many countries.For example: We’re taking a short trip on Easter Monday.
Easter breakTime off school/work around Easter (common in many places).For example: The kids are on Easter break, so the house is louder than usual.
family gatheringA meal or meet-up with relatives (common around holidays).For example: We’re having a family gathering with way too much food.
Easter brunchA late morning meal combining breakfast and lunch (very Easter-coded).For example: We booked a place for Easter brunch with pancakes and coffee.
spring cleaningA deep clean people do in springtime.For example: I did spring cleaning and found socks I thought were gone forever.

Section 3: Optional Variants and Extra-Useful Notes

Same idea, different wording depending on country, context, or how fancy you feel.

You might hearAlso meansWhen to use itHear
Easter holidaysEaster break / time offCommon wording in many places for school/work time off around Easter.
egg huntEaster egg huntShorter, casual version when context is already Easter.
to hide eggsto set up an egg huntUse this when you’re the behind-the-scenes mastermind.
church on EasterEaster serviceSimple and conversational if you’re chatting with friends.
seasonal treatsEaster candyPolite, neutral wording when you’re not sure what someone celebrates.
Enjoy the long weekendHappy Easter (neutral)Great if you want to be friendly without assuming religion or traditions.

Quick “chat-ready” mini phrases

Try these when you don’t want a long conversation but you still want to sound human.

Yak Snark If someone says “I gave up chocolate for Lent,” you don’t have to understand it. Just respect it… quietly… while holding a cookie.

One last tip: “Easter” is pronounced like EE-ster. Not “eh-ASS-ter.” Your tongue deserves better.