If faith is a gift then Calvinism is false as the I in Tulip is false, because these assert that God forced you to accept a gift, which, since it was impossible for you to reject, was not a gift, thus making Calvisnism, if true, a disprover of either the Bible or the dictionary, either for English or Greek.
gift
■ noun
1 a thing given willingly to someone without payment; a present.
▶ informal a very easy task or unmissable opportunity.
2 a natural ability or talent.
■ verb
1 give as a gift, especially formally.
▶ informal inadvertently allow (an opponent) to have something.
2 (gift someone with) endow someone with (an ability or talent).
▶ [as adjective gifted] having exceptional talent or ability.
—PHRASES
in the gift of (of a Church living or official appointment) in the power of (someone) to award.
—DERIVATIVES giftable adjective (US). giftedness noun
—ORIGIN Middle English: from Old Norse gipt; related to GIVE.
Catherine Soanes and Angus Stevenson, eds., Concise Oxford English Dictionary (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004).
Where is the requirement of acceptance in these definitions?