kimkat0237e Geiriadur Cymraeg (Gwenhwyseg) - Saesneg /
Welsh (Gwentian dialect) English Dictionary.
19-02-2018
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Gwefan
Cymru-Catalonia E - M |
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(delwedd 5781c)
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The main purpose of this dictionary is to give an approximation of Gwentian
Welsh (the Welsh of the former counties of Sir Forgannwg / Glamorganshire and
Sir Fynwy / Monmouthshire) which might serve to read texts written in the
dialect.
Prif amcan y geiriadur hwn yw rhoi
fraslun neu amlinelliad or Wenhwyseg (Cymraeg hen siroedd Morgannwg and Mynwy)
a all fod o fudd wrth ddarllen ysgrifau
yn y dafodiaith honno.
Here is a list of material
in Gwentian or about Gwentian on this website : Dyma restr o ddeunydd yn y dafodiaith neu sydd yn ymwneud
hi:
kimkat1094e
www.kimkat.org/amryw/1_gwenhwyseg/gwenhwyseg_llyfrau-yn-y-wefan-hon_mynegai_0194e.htm
....
eclan# [ˡɛklan] (v) 1/ haggle (over a
price) 2/ wrangle, bargain (= dadlau
[ˡdadlaɪ])
From English HAGGLE /
HEGGLE.
(Joseph Wright, English
Dialect Dictionary 1903: HEGGLE (Somerset), HEIGLE (West Somerset).
HEGGLE > (HEGL-) + -(AN
verbal suffix) > HEGLAN > ??Gwentian ECLAN (this is the presumed Gwentian
form we have found no example as yet in dialect texts)
eclws [ˡɛklʊs] (nf) church (= eglwys [ˡɛgluɪs])
Eclwshīlan [ɛklʊʃilan] (nf) village and parish
(= Eglwysilan [ɛgluɪsilan])
Y
Darian. 5 Mehefin 1919. Wēti dōd lawr ō Eclwshīlan (Weti dod
lawr o Eclwshilan) having come down from Eglwysilan...
(delwedd 5964)
ecsgws [ɛkˡskjɪʊs]
(nm) excuse (= esgus [ˡɛsgɪs])
ecsgwsiz [ɛkˡskjɪʊsɪz]
(pl) (= esgusion [ɛˡsgɪsjɔn])
gnīthir ecsgwsiz make excuses
ēddi [ˡe:ɪ] (adv)
today (= heddiw [ˡhe:ɪʊ])
ēfill [ˡevɪɬ] (soft-mutated form) > gēfill
eidīa [əɪˡdia]
(nf) idea (= syniad [ˡsənjad])
eidīaz [əɪˡdiaz] (pl) ideas (= syniadau [sənˡjadaɪ])
From English IDEA
eithis [ˡəɪθɪs] (adj) terrible,
dreadful, terrible (= aethus [ˡəɪθɪs])
yn grȳf eithis terribly strongly
elcyd [ˡɛlkɪd] (v) 1/ hunt (= hela [ˡhɛla]); 2/ gather, collect (= casglu [ˡkasglɪ])
Emwnt [ˡɛmʊnt] (nm) 1/ (forename) Edmund (= Emwnt [ˡɛmʊnt]) 2/ (patronymic) son of Edmund (= ab Emwnt [ab ˡɛmʊnt]) 3/ (surname) Edmund, Edmunds (= Emwnt [ˡɛmʊnt])
ēn [e:n] (adj) old (= hen [he:n])
Cf. A Glossary Of Berkshire
Words And Phrases. Major B. Lowsley, Royal Engineers. London. Published For The
English Dialecl' Society. 1888. (All [words and expressions] as now submitted
I have heard spoken in Mid-Berkshire.) AWLD. Awld is specially used as a
term of familiarity, or even endearment. Thus a man would say of his wife, My
awld ooman ooll hev dinner jus' ready vor us. [= My old woman will have
dinner just ready for us]
ēnad [ˡe:nad] (nm) soul (= enaid [ˡe:naɪd])
gwīthoch ēnad mɛ̄s
ī... work heart and soul in order to...
galli fentro dēnad you can bet
your life on it (e.g. in threatening an action of reprisal)
Yr
Endra [ər ˡɛndra]) (nf) place name (= yr Hendre [ər ˡhɛndrɛ])
Endraforgan
[ɛndraˡvɔrgan]) (nf) place name (= Hendreforgan [hɛndrɛˡvɔrgan]) (The Diary of William
Herbert, 1886-87)
nfilop [ˡɛnvɪlɔp] (nm) envelope (= amlen [ˡamlɛn])
nfilops [ˡɛnvɪlɔps] (pl) (= amlenni [amˡlɛnɪ])
ennill [ˡɛnɪɬ] win (= ennill [ˡɛnɪɬ] )
nillws [ˡnɪɬʊs] (= enillws) he
/ she / it won
Also: ennith [ˡɛnɪθ]
enwētig [ɛnˡwetɪg] especial (= enwedig [ɛnˡwedɪg])
yn enwētig / nenwētig especially
(Other forms and spellings: enwetig, enwetic)
ēno [ˡenɔ] (adv)
tonight (= heno [ˡhenɔ])
esgid [ˡɛsgɪd] (nf) shoe (= esgid [ˡɛsgɪd])
sgitsha
[ˡsgɪʧa] (pl) shoes (= esgidiau [əˡsgɪdjaɪ])
For the development of the plural form, see the separate entry sgitsha.
esmwth [ˡɛsmʊθ] (adj) smooth (= esmwyth [ˡɛsmuiθ])
shincyn
esmwth [ˡʃɪŋkɪn ˡɛsmʊθ]) (west Glamorgan ) bread or toast in a bowl onto which hot
water ot tea is poured, and to which butter is then added, and sugar or salt or
pepper or nutmeg; shincyn.
estar [ˡɛstar] (nf) row (= rhestr [ˡrhɛstɛr])
estar fɛ̄ch ō dai a small row of houses
y rhestr > y rhester (epenthetic vowel) > y rester (loss of h) > y
restar (Gwentian a) > yr estar (an example of camraniad or false
splitting)
(yr) Estar Fawr (the) High Street,
Rhymni
Y Pētar Estar (the four rows / terraces
/ ranks) These were early nineteenth century (c1810?) ironworkers' houses in
Tredegar, called "The Four Rows" in English. The "Ystrad
Deri" housing estate was built on the site of Y Pētar Estar.
(delwedd 5968)
Tarian y Gweithiwr 11
Ebrill 1895
NODION O RYMNI.
Bendith ar ben Cymry America
am roddi cofgolofn anrhydeddus ar fedd un o blant Rhymni, sef y diweddar
gerddor Gwilym Gwent. Nid yw pawb o ddarllenwyr y DARIAN yn gwybod mai yma y
magwyd ef, y mae yn bosibl. Beth bynag, yr ydym am roddi gwybod iddynt, ac
hefyd yn dymuno adgofio y rhai hyny sydd wedi anghofio fod yma rai o hyd yn ei
gofio yn hogyn bychan gydai dad a'i lysfam, yn un o dai y Rhestr Fawr, ac yn el gofio tua deg
oed, ai gam byr, a'i fox bwyd ar ei gefn yn myned ir pwll glo, fel y rhelyw o
blant Rhymni. Yn y talcen glo drachefn, gwelid ar y rhaw a'r pyst coed l traed
brain (ys dywed yr hen bobl am notes
y cerddorion). Wedi dychwelyd o'r gwaith, byddai yn gwneud gwahanol offerynau
cerdd o goed, a hyny gydar gyllell boced yn unig, ac yn arwain plant y
gymydogaeth o gwmpas yr heolydd yn eu marching
order, i chwareu yr offerynau hyny. Y mae y gofgolofn yn werth rhyw ddau
cant o bunnau, ac nid ydym yn gwybod am neb o blant y gn sydd yn fwy teilwng.
Tarian y Gweithiwr (The
Workers Shield) 11 April 1895
NOTES FROM RHYMNI.
A blessing for the
American Welsh for placing an honouring memorial on the tomb of one of
Rhymney's sons, namely the late musician Gwilym Gwent. Possibly not all DARIAN
readers know that he was brought up here. Be that as it may, we are making this
known to them, and also we wish to remind those who have forgotten that there
are still some people here who remember him as a little lad with his father and
his stepmother, in one of the houses of the Rhestr Fawr (= 'Great Row /
Terrace), and remember him at the age of about ten
with his short step, and
his food box on his back, going to the colliery, like the rest of the children
of Rhymney. Then at the coal face, on the shovel and the wooden props one could
see the footprints of crows (as the old people would call the notes of
musicians). After returning from work, he would make different musical
instruments out of wood, (and that) with just a pocket knife, and lead the
children of the neighborhood around the streets in a march (in their their
marching order) to play these instruments. The monument is worth about two
hundred pounds, and we do not know about any of the devotees of music
(children of song) who are more deserving.
etfan
[ˡɛtvan]) (v) fly (= hedfan [ˡhɛdvan])
etfan drwr ywyr fly through the air
Etwart [ˡɛtwart]) (nm) Edward (= Edward [ˡɛdward])
Edward was considered to be an equivalent of the native name Iorwerth because
of its vague resemblance; it was used early on as a substitute for Iorwerth,
and is found as a surname in the form Edward, Edwards, Bedward (= ab Edward).
In the nineteenth century,
in writers pseudonyms, an Edward might style himself Iorwerth. See Iōrath, the Gwentian form of
Iorwerth.
ewl [ɛʊl] (f) street (= heol [ˡheɔl])
ewlydd [ˡɛʊlɪ]
(pl) streets (= heolydd [heˡolɪ])
ar yr ewl in the street, on the
street
Pen-rewl [pɛnˡrɛʊl] (place name) (= Pen-yr-heol [pɛn ər ˡheɔl]) (= top end of the
road)
Tyn-rewl [tɪnˡrɛʊl] (place name) (cf 1891 Census:
Tyn Rhewl (Cilybebyll) (= Tyn-yr-heol [tɪn ər ˡheɔl]) (= smallholding by the
road)
ewl lɛ̄s green way, green lane
(North Wales: fford las) ?a track bounded by trees and bushes or hedgerows.
Name of various places
(e.g. 1] Llwynfedw / Birchgrove, Abertawe; 2] farm near in Llan-gan, Y
Bont-faen / Cowbridge; 3] farm in Creunant).
Yr Ewl-ddī [ər ɛʊl ˡi:] (f) street (= Yr Heol-ddu [ər heɔl ˡ i:])
(delwedd 5950)
falla [ˡvaɬa] (adv) perhaps, maybe (= efallai [ɛˡvaɬaɪ], = hwyrach [ˡhuɪrax])
Also walla [ˡwaɬa], with [f] > [w]
falla bō chīn ffīli diall
blē... maybe you are wondering where... (failing to
understand)
FALLA < EFALLAI <
EF A ALLAI (EF = it) + (A = which) + soft mutation + (GALLAI = might be)
Y Fartag [ə ˡvartag] village name (= Y Farteg [ə ˡvartɛg])
(delwedd 5819)
Y Feinor [ə ˡvəɪnɔr] village name (= Y Faenor [ə ˡvəɪnɔr])
Spelt in English as Vaynor which more or less
indicates the Welsh pronunciation
fer [vɛr] (nf) fir tree (= ffynidwydden [fənɪdwəɛn])
pren fer fir tree
cōd fer fir trees
Other words in Welsh
are: ffir [fir] (from modern English fir), fyr / pren fyr [fɪr, prɛn fɪr] (from Middle English vyrre = fir tree, or modern
south-western-English dialects).
GPC notes (translated
from Welsh) ferren diminutive form. The forms in general use in Morgannwg /
Glamorgan and Sir Gaerfyrddin / Carmarthenshire are y fer, pren fer, coed fer
(with a short e). There is a place in Llansadwrn, Sir Gaerfyrddin /
Carmarthenshire called Pant-y-fer (= hollow of the fire tree).
Note: VEER.
sb. Fir tree. [Kingscote.] (A Glossary Of Dialect And Archaic Words
Used In The County Of Gloucester. 1890.
John Drummond Robertson. Born
Cuileann Ros, Siorrachd Pheairt, Alba (=
Culross, Perthshire, Scotland) 02-02-1857.
Died (77) 10-10-1934, Torbay, England.
Edited By Lord Moreton (Henry Haughton Reynolds-Moreton) Born London 04-03-1857. Died (63) London
28-02-1920.)
ffact [fakt] (nf) fact (= ffaith [faɪθ])
dyna bēth ffact ī chi and thats a fact
(there is + a thing of a fact + to you)
ffamws [ˡfamʊs] (adj) splendid, fine,
wonderful (= gwych [gwi:x]; ardderchog [arˡɛrxɔg])
ffecto [ˡfɛktɔ] (v) effect (= effeithio ar [ɛˡfəɪθjɔ ar])
ffeilētig [fəɪˡletɪg] (adj) (especially by old age) feeble, incapacitated,
disabled, handicapped (= methedig [mɛˡθedɪg], ffaeledig [fəɪˡledɪg])
Also: ffilētig
[fɪˡletɪg]
(delwedd 5905)
Y Gwladgarwr. 15 Hydref 1859. IR CLAF NEU FFAELEDIG!
Y MAE MR. J. L. PRICHARD, PROFESSWR Y REMEDIAL FLUID, Llysieuydd
Meddygol, Medical Galvanist, Chemist, Druggist, Dentist, &c.,
GOGYFER Y BUSH INN, HEOL FAWR,
DOWLAIS, Yn dymuno tynu sylw y cyhoedd ei fod yn barhaus yn
gwneuthur canoedd o cures, a' r
ddynion [sic; = ar ddynion] o pob [sic; = bob] cwr or wlad pan y mae y
Doctoriaid yr Infirmaries a'r Hospitals blaenaf yn y deyrnas yn methu
gwneud dim lles, daw unrhyw berson attaf, caiff berffaith foddlonrwydd or
canoedd gwelliadau hynod ac sydd wedi cael ei gwneuthur, ac yn cael eu gwneud
ar bob math o afiechyd a doluriau, trwy effeithiau Prichard's Patent
Restorative Apparatuses, ynghyd a thriniaeth meddygol arall. Cynghor yn
ddigost. Am dystiolaethau, gwel handbills. PILLS LLYSIEUOL PRICHARD...
The Gwladgarwr (= the patriot).
October 15, 1859. For the sick and incapacitated.
MR. J. L. PRICHARD, The Remedial Fluid Professor, Medical Herbalist, Medical Galvanist,
Chemist, Druggist, Dentist, etc.,
opposite the Bush Inn, High Street,
Dowlais, wishes to draw the attention of the public [to the fact that] that he
is continually making hundreds of cures, and that people from all parts of the
country for people when the Doctors of the leading infirmaries and hospitals in
the kingdom are unable to give relief (= failing to make any benefit); any
person [who] comes to me will get perfect satisfaction from the hundreds of
remarkable cures that have been effected (hundreds of magnificent improvements
which have been made) and are eing effected (made) qith all types of illness
and pain (on all kinds of illness and pains), through the effects of
Prichard's Patent RestorativeApparatuses, along with other medical treatment.
Advice free of charge. For testimonials, see handbills. PRICHARDS HERBAL
PILLS...
ffeili [ˡfəɪlɪ] (v) fail (= methu [ˡmeθɪ])
Also ffīli
[filɪ]
ffein [fəɪn] (adj) (person) fine, splendid (= hynaws [ˡhənaus], = hawddgar [ˡhaugar])
dȳn ffein yw hes a
fine man
From English FINE [fain]
ffēnast [ˡfenast]
(f) window (= fenestr [ˡfenɛst, ˡfenɛstr])
ffenestri (pl) [fɛˡnɛstrɪ]
windows (= ffenestri [fɛˡnɛstrɪ]).
Also ffēnas (cf final st > s in Gwentian in brecwast / brecwas [ˡbrɛkwast / ˡbrɛkwas] = breakfast)
Also ffynestri (pl) [fəˡnɛstrɪ]
NOTES: (1) The loss of a the final r (after t,
d, th) in polysyllabic words is a common colloquial Welsh feature. Thus ffenestr
> ffenest.
Other examples (here
using standard forms) are:
cebystr (= halter for a horse) > cebyst,
aradr (= plough) > arad
(2) In the south-east, a final e > a.
Thus ffenest > ffenast.
ffīli [filɪ], See ffeili [fəɪlɪ]
ffit [fɪt] (adj) fitting (= addas [ˡaas])
fē
fysa'n ffitach fōd...
itd be more fitting if...
fflachdar [ˡflaxdar] (adv) topsy-turvy, sprawling (= pendramwnwgl [pɛndraˡmunʊg])
cwmpon fflachdar fall in a heap
(From English dialect FLAUGHTER; this same word noted by Joseph Wright as being
used in Scotland (FLAUGHTER = a heavy fall (1838))
ffleio [fləɪɔ] (v) fly (= hedfan
[ˡhɛdfan])
Also fflio [fliɔ]
ffliw [fliu] (v) flue = duct, passage
for air, smoke, gas, etc (= ffliw [fliu])
Ffliwr Mynydd; Flliwr Helyg (in Abercannaid Pit
formerly) (Flue y Mynydd, Flue yr
Helyg; 15-11-1888 Tarian y Gweithiwr)
ffliwchan [ˡfliuxan] (v) (of light snow or
rain falling) (= bwrw eira ysgafn, bwrw
glaw ysgafn [ˡburʊ ira / glau ˡesgavn])
ffliwchan īra be snowing with light
snowflakes
ffliwchan glaw be raining with fine drops
(Other forms and spellimngs: ffluwchan)
ffop [fɔp] (nm) fop, dandy, coxcomb,
swell; vain person with exaggerated concern for clothes and appearance, and who
affects elegant manners (= coegyn [ˡkɔɪgɪn])
ffops [fɔp] (pl) (= coegynnau [kɔɪˡgənaɪ])
Lewis y Ffop / Llysenwau Pontardawe a'r Cylch (=
nicknames of Pontardawe and the neighbouring area)
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cwmgors/Llysenwauponty.html
From English FOP, probably
related to modern German FOPPEN (= tease, pull the leg of, fool, make fun of,
kid)
ffor [fɔr] (adv) how (= sit [sɪt])
Ffor
ddāth ā ī w̄pod am... how did he find out about.... how did he get to know
about...
PA FFORDD (= which way) > FFORDD (loss of pretonic syllable PA) > FFOR
(= loss of final DD)
(The construction shows
the influence of the direct question A DDAETH...? did he come...?
After an adverb the
partice is Y, which does nor cause soft mutation: PA FFORDD Y DAETH... Such particles
are usually dropped in spoken Welsh, though any mutation caused remains)
fft [fo:t] (nf) fault = (geology) crack (= toriad [ˡtɔrjad])
ffts [fo:ts] (pl) (= toriadau [tɔrˡjadaɪ])
ffowntan [ˡfɔuntan] (nf) ornamental fountain, drinking
fountain (= ffownten [ˡfɔuntɛn])
ffowntanz [fɔuntanz] (pl) (= ffowntenni [fɔunˡtɛnɪ])
ffresh [frɛʃ] (adj) fresh (= ffres [frɛʃ])
ffritwn [ˡfrɪtʊn] (nf) fritter (= ffriter [ˡfrɪtɛr])
ffritwnz [ˡfrɪtʊnz]
(pl) (= ffriteri [ˡfrɪterɪ])
NOTE: adapted from Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru
ffrwmp [frʊm] (nm) pride, swagger (= balchder, rhwysg [ˡbalxdɛr,
hruisg])
ffw̄rwm īshta [ˡfurʊm ˡɪʃta]
(nm) bench (= the bench (of) sitting, the sitting bench) (= ffwrm eistedd [furm ˡəɪstɛ])
At Machen there is a former inn (now a restaurant
21-07-2017) called Y Ffw̄rwm Īshta, so called from an
ancient bench outside the house.
Cf. ZETTLE A long wooden bench to accommodate several persons ; it is found
at way-side public houses and in outer
kitchens or brew-houses of farm houses. A Glossary
Of Berkshire Words And Phrases. Major B. Lowsley, Royal Engineers. London.
Published For The English Dialecl' Society. 1888. (All [words and expressions]
as now submitted I have heard spoken in Mid-Berkshire.)
(Other spellings: ffwrwm, ffwrm, ishta)
fī [vi:] (pronoun) I, me (= fi [vi:])
fyswn ī bỳth yn... [ˡvəsʊn
i: bɪθ ən..])] (phrase)
Id never... (= ni fuaswn byth yn.... [ni: vɪˡasʊn bɪθ ən..])
Also: swn
ī bỳth yn... (i.e. first syllable the pretonic syllable - dropped)
gāfal [ˡgavaɬ] (nf) hold, grip, grasp (= gafael [ˡgavaɪɬ])
cɛ̄l gāfal yn... get
hold of...
(Other spellings: gafal, gafel, gafael, afal, afel,
afael, nhgafal, ngafel, ngafael)
galifanto [galɪˡvantɔ] wander about (seeking enjoyment or pleasure)
English GALLIVANT, from 1800+, perhaps some variant of
GALLANT.
GALLIVANT 1/ wander around looking for fun 2/ go about
with someone of the opposite sex
Gallivant.
To be gadding about on a spree with a companion of the
opposite
sex (S.): to run after the girls, or 'chaps,' as the case
may
be.--N. & S.W. A Glossary Of Words Used In The County Of Wiltshire. George Edward Dartnell
And The Rev. Edward Hungerford Goddard, M.A. The English Dialect Society. 1893.
(English GALLIVANT >
GALIFANT) + (-IO verbal suffix) > GALIFANTIO (= Gwentian GALIFANTO)
gffar [ˡgafar] (v) gaffer, boss (= pennaeth [ˡpɛnaɪθ])
(other spellings: gaffar, gaffer, gaffars, gaffers)
galli [ˡgaɬɪ] (v) be able to (= gallu [ˡgaɬɪ])
alla ī ddim mynd I cant go
> (rapid speech) alla im mynd, lla
im mynd
gālw [ˡgalʊ] (v) 1/ call (= summon) 2/ call (= give a name to) (= galw [ˡgalʊ])
gālw rw̄un ar
bōb ēnw drw̄g call somebody every name under the sun (call somebody
on every bad name)
Y Gār [ə ˡga:r]. See Y Gɛ̄r [ə ˡgɛ:r] (= place name; the fortress, camp, earthwork)
gātal [ˡgatal]
(v) leave (= gadael [ˡgadaɪl])
(other forms and spellings: giatal)
gēfill [ˡgevɪɬ] (nm) twin (= gefaill [ˡgevaɪɬ])
dou ēfill yw Wil ā Dai Wil
and Dai are twins ((it is) two twins that-are Wil and Dai)
geino [gəɪnɔ] (v) 1/ convalesce (= ymadfer
[əˡmadvɛr]) 2/ make gains (= symud
ymlaen [ˡsəmɪd əˡmlaɪn])
From English GAIN = to win, acquire
(GEIN) + (-IO verbal suffix) > GEINIO (> Gwentian
GEINO)
Gelli-gɛ̄r [ˡgɛɬɪ ˡgɛ:r] (f) village
name (= Gelli-gaer
[ˡgɛɬɪ
ˡgaɪr]).
The name ought to be (in standard Welsh) Cellir-gaer /
Celli-gaer
the grove by the [Roman] fort (CELLI = grove) + (YR
definite article) + soft mutation + (CAER = fort), but the soft-mutated form
(possibly because of its frequency as such after prepositions o Gelli-gaer (=
from), i Gelli-gaer (= to) , yn Gelli-gaer (standard yng Nghelli-gaer) (= in))
has come to be regarded as the radical form.
(Other spellings; Gellygare)
(delwedd 5949)
Y Gɛ̄r [ә gɛ:r] (v) Location in Casnewydd. (= Y Gaer [ә
gaɪr]).
(Other spellings: Gaer, Gr, Gare)
geso [gɛsɔ] (v) guess (= dyfalu
[dəˡvalr])
English GUESS; (GES) + (verbal suffix -IO) > GESIO
(> Gwentian GESO)
Y Gilfach-gōch [ə ˡgɪlvax ˡgo:x]) (nf) name of
village (= Y Gilfach-goch [ə ˡgɪlvax ˡgo:x]) (the red nook,
the red corner)
Gilfāchyn
[gɪlˡvaxɪn])
(nm) inhabitant of Y Gilfach-goch (Y
Darian 20-04-1916)
girfa# [ˡgɪrva] (nf) vocabulary (= geirfa [ˡgəɪrva])
girfaon# [gɪrˡvaɔn] (pl) (= geirfaon [gəɪrˡvaɔn])
(first example of the word GEIRFA occurs in 1858, according to GPC. Included
here in Gwentian guise (GIRFA) as we have used it in the title for our Gwentian
vocabulary section!)
gita [ˡgɪta] (prep) with (= [a:], gyda [ˡgəda])
gita cryndod yn ī
laish in a shaky voice
glan [glan] (nf) river bank (= glan [glan])
glanna [glana] (= glannau [ˡglanaɪ])
byw ar lan yr āfon live next to the river (on the river bank)
glān [gla:n], See glɛ̄n [glɛ:n] (= clean; fair, pretty)
glās [gla:s]. See glɛ̄s [glɛ:s] (= blue; green)
Y Glaish [ə ˡglaɪʃ] (nm) village name (= Y Glais [ə ˡglaɪs]) (glais =
stream; nowadays only in place names)
glanwadd [ˡglanwa] (nm) pretty (= glanwedd
[ˡglanwɛ])
menyw
lanwadd digynnig an
extremely attractive woman
glaw [glau] rain (= glaw [glau])
There existed an alternative (but
erroneous) spelling gwlaw, which GPC notes as first appearing
in 1681, and ascribes it to the influence of the words gwlyb (= wet) and gwlych
(= liquid, fluid)
glɛ̄n [glɛ:n] (adj) clean; beautiful (= gln [gla:n] = clean)
glɛ̄s [glɛ:s] (adj) (1) blue; (2) (vegetation) green; (3)
(coin) silver; (= glas [gla:s])
glīshon [ˡgliʃɔn] (pl) ] (= gleision [ˡgləɪsjɔn])
arian glīshon silver = silver
coins
See: Beili-glɛ̄s (= green
farmyard)
In place names with an Englished spelling, glɛ̄s is spelt as glace, which is (very) approximately
the local Gwentian pronunciation: ...though the Welsh language has died out,
the people have retained the old Gwentian pronunciation of the county's
place-names, for example: Maceglace (Maesglas), Brynglace (Brynglas)... Some Thoughts and Notes on the English of South Wales / D.
Parry-Jones / National Library of Wales Journal. / 1974, Winter. Volume
XVIII/4.
Cɛ̄ Gleishon / Cɛ̄
Glīshon
Examples
are
1/ Llangasty Tal-y-llyn, Brycheiniog
(noted as Cae Gleishon);
2/ (outside the Gwentian area) a
document dated 27 October 1770 held at the Shropshire Records Office (SRO
2847/9/3) mentions the Cae glision in Melverley, Shropshire, England just
across the border between England and Wales;
3/ a field name in Rhondda (Cae Glishon;
Rhondda Place Names, Rhondda Leader 2 September 1909).
The name would appear to be in full caer gleision, where glas is possibly
a plant name (e.g. Isatis tinctoria, dyers woad) ((the) field (of) the
woad-plants)
Tyla-glɛ̄s, farm by
Gelli-gaer (c.1782: Tylla Glase) (= green hill)
Y Pant-glɛ̄s [ə pant ˡglɛ:s] (nm) place name (= the green hollow) (= Y Pant-glas [ə pant ˡgla:s])
glō [glo:] (m) coal (= glo [glo:])
pwll glō (m) coal mine, coal pit, colliery (= pwll
glo)
torri glō hew coal
gnīthir [ˡgniθɪr] (v) make (= gwneud [gwnəɪd, gwneuthur [ˡgwnəɪθɪr])
golyci [gɔˡləkɪ] (v) mean (= golygu [gɔˡləgɪ])
Gomorrah [gɔˡmɔra] (-) 1/ (Bible) (Genesis 19:24, 19:25) (= Gomorrah [gɔˡmɔra])
One of two cities near the Dead Sea (Sodom was the other)
destroyed by God because of the wicked behaviour of their inhabitants.
2/ Sodom and Gomorrah a district of two streets so
called in Pontlotyn - Chapel Street was Gomorrah and Bute Terrace was Sodom.
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=535430.0
gōla [ˡgola] (nm) 1/ light; 2/ light (= electric light, etc) (= golau [ˡgolaɪ])
roir gōla m**s turn off the light
gōlwg [ˡgolʊg] (nm) 1/ look, appearance (= golwg [ˡgolʊg]) 2/ great number
wim līco gōlwg
y bachān na I dont like the look of that man over there
gōlwg ō
bōpol very many people
Cf Devon dialect (Sight: great quantity or number.
Rustic Sketches; being poems on angling ... in the dialect of East Devon ...
George Philip Rigney Pulman 1842)
gomrod [ˡgɔmrɔd] (nm) excess; (adv) too much (= gormod
[ˡgɔmrɔd])
See gormodd
gōnast [ˡgonast] (adj) honest (= gonest [ˡgonɛst])
fɛ̄ wētas
yn ōnast... I said honestly...
English ONEST (i.e. HONEST); an itinial g added since
it was supposed that onest was a soft-mutated form of gonest.
Cf the word in northern Welsh and standard Welsh ALLT (=
hill) which is South Wales is GALLT (= wooded hill).
gōpath [ˡgopaθ] (nm) hope (= gobaith [ˡgobaɪθ])
gobeithion [gɔˡbəɪθjɔn]
(pl) hopes (= gobeithion [gɔˡbəɪθjɔn])
Also: gopith [ˡgopɪθ]
gōra [ˡgora] (adj) best (= gorau [ˡgoraɪ])
gormodd [ˡgɔrmɔ] (nm) excess; (adv) too much (= gormod
[ˡgɔrmɔd])
Also gomrod
[ˡgɔmrɔd]
yn
ormodd lawar
(adv) far too much
grīdd [gri:] (eb) cheek (= grudd
[gri:])
griddia [ˡgrɪja] (pl) (= gruddiau
[ˡgrɪjaɪ]
Grff [grɪf] (nm) short form of the forename Griffidd
(other forms and spellings: Gruff, Griff)
Griffidd [ˡgrifɪ] (nm) forename (= Gruffudd
[ˡgrifɪ])
(Other spellings: Griffydd, Gruffydd)
grīg [gri:g] (mass noun ) heather (= grug [gri:g])
Also: gwrig
[gwri:g] (See GPC under grug)
grīcos [ˡgrikɔs] small heather clumps (= grugos [ˡgrigɔs])
Hence Y Rīcos
(place name). officially (though incorrectly) as Y Rhigos
grondo [ˡgrɔndɔ] (v) to listen (= gwrando
[ˡgwrandɔ])
rw̄
ī wēti grondo arno f lawar ō wītha Ive listened to him many times
falla
grindiff arno chī nawr maybe hell listen to you now
Y Grōs-fɛ̄n [ə gro:s ˡvɛ:n] (nf) village name; between Pen-tyrch and
Llantrisant (= Y Groes-faen [ə grɔɪs ˡvaɪn])
Other forms and spellings: Englished as Crossvane.
Groesfan.
gwād [gwa:d]. See gwɛ̄d [gwɛ:d] (= blood)
gwāth [gwa:θ]. See gwɛ̄th [gwɛ:θ] (= worse)
gwaith [gwaɪθ] (nm) 1/ work 2/ ironworks, coal mine
(= gwaith [gwaɪθ])
gweitha [ˡgwəɪθa]
(pl) (= gweithiau [ˡgwəɪθjaɪ]. Also gwītha [ˡgwi:θa]
See Y Gweitha
gwaith
brics [gwaɪθ ˡbrɪks] brickworks
gwaith
glō [gwaɪθ ˡglo:] coal mine
gwaith
arn [gwaɪθ ˡarn] ironworks (= gwaith haearn
[gwaɪθ ˡhəɪarn])
gwaith
copor [gwaɪθ ˡkɔpɔr] copperworks
gwās [gwa:s]. See gwɛ̄s [gwɛ:s] (= farmhand, servant)
gwashgōti [gwaʃˡgotɪ] (v) (1) to shelter, (2) to
shade, to put in shadow (= gwasgodi [gwasˡgodɪ])
Also gwishgōti [gwɪʃˡgotɪ]
NOTE: (1) In the South d at the beginning of the final
syllable becomes t,
(2) s becomes sh in
the vicinity of i but sometimes in other environments
Source: Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru, page 1596
gw̄ddoch [ˡguɔx] (v) you know See gw̄pod
[ˡgupɔd] = to know
gwddw̄ca [gʊˡuka] (pl) necks, throats. See gwddf [gʊv] = neck, throat
gw̄ddwg [ˡguʊg] (nm) neck, throat (= gwddf [gʊv])
gwddw̄ca [gʊˡuka]
(= gyddfau [ˡgəvaɪ])
Also: gyddyca [gəˡəka]
gwɛ̄d [gwɛ:d] (nm) blood (= gwaed [gwaɪd])
gweid [gwəɪd] (v) say (= dweud [gwəɪd], dywedyd [dəˡwedɪd])
Compare North Wales DEUD.
gwētoch chī fynnoch chi (= dywedoch chi a fynnoch chi) say what you like (you
may say that which you may wish)
gwētws
a (=
dywedodd e) he said
n fi'n
gweid wrthoch chi nawr Im
telling you, honestly I will (theres me telling you now)
gweilod [ˡgwəɪlɔd] (nm) bottom (= gwaelod [ˡgwəɪlɔd])
gweiloton# [gwəɪˡlotɔn] (pl) (= gweilodion [gwəɪˡlɔdjɔn])
Also gwīlod
[ˡgwilɔd]
mandral gwīlod [ˡgwilɔd] large heavy pick (= mandrel gwaelod [ˡmandrɛl ˡgwəɪlɔd])
gweirwr [ˡgwəɪrʊr] (nm) haymaker (= gweiriiwr
[ˡgwəɪrjʊr])
gweirwrz# [ˡgwəɪθʊrz]
(pl) (= gweirwyr [ˡgwəɪrwɪr])
Also gwīrwr#
[ˡgwirʊr], gwīrwrz#
[ˡgwiθʊrz]
Y Gweitha [ə ˡgwəɪθa] (pl) The Works,
the ironworks and coal mines of south-east Wales (= y
Gweithiau [ə ˡgwəɪθjaɪ])
Also Y Gwītha [ə ˡgwiθa].
gweitha [ˡgwəɪθa] (adj) worst (= gwaethaf
[ˡgwəɪθav])
y pēth gweitha the worst thing
gweitho [ˡgwəɪθɔ] (v) to work (= gweithio
[ˡgwəɪθjɔ])
Also gwītho [ˡgwiθɔ].
NOTES:
In the South
(1) ei in the penult > ī [i],
(2) initial [j] in a final syllable is lost
gweithwr [ˡgwəɪθʊr] (nm) worker (= gweithiwr
[ˡgwəɪθjʊr])
gweithwrs [ˡgwəɪθʊrs]
(pl) (= gweithwyr [ˡgwəɪθwɪr])
Also gwīthwr
[ˡgwiθʊr], gwīthwrs
[ˡgwiθʊrs]
gwɛ̄ll [gwe:ɬ] (adj) better (= gwell [gwe:ɬ])
m rai yn wɛ̄ll nāi
gīddyl
some are better than others
gwella [ˡgwɛɬa] (v) get better, improve (= gwella [ˡgwɛɬa])
gwēly [ˡgwelɪ] (nm) bed (= gwely [ˡgwelɪ])
gwelȳa [gwɛˡɬia] (pl) (= gwelyai [gwɛˡɬiaɪ])
Gwēnar [ˡgwenar] (nm) Friday (= Gwener [ˡgwenɛr])
dȳ Gwēnar Friday
nōs Wēnar Friday night
Gwent [gwɛnt] (nf) Gwent, (archaic) Gwentland; = region of south-east
Wales of which part was incorporated into England (= Gwent [gwɛnt])
(delwedd 2290d)
Cas-gwent town on the border with
England (Chepstow) (= castell Gwent; the castle (at the entrance to) Gwent)
Caer-went town in Gwent ([Roman]
fortification at the place called Venta)
ORIGIN: The town of Uenta (called by the Romans Uenta
Silurum, that is, the Brittonic name Uenta and the Latin genitive plural Siurum
(= of the Silurian people, of the Silurians) became, in early Welsh, Uent and
later Gwent, and was applied to the territory administered from Uenta. The name
of the town itself in Welsh became Caer-went.
(delwedd 2300b)
Gwent Is Coed (the cantref was divided into six cymydau
(commotes) Brynbuga, Llebennydd, Tre-grug, Is Coed, Edeligion, Tryleg.
Gwent Uwch Coed
Dwywent (in poetry c.1400 onwards, the two Gwents i.e.
Is Coed and Uwch Coed
Gwenwisag# [gwɛnˡwɪsag] (nf) Gwentian = the Welsh dialect of Gwent and Morgannwg;
(adj) pertaining to Gwentian (= Gwenhwyseg [gwɛnˡhuɪsɛg])
Although this is the name
of the dialect it is more than anything a literary word. The dialect was seen
more as a part of iaith y Sowth (Southern Welsh), and in the nineteenth
century to speakers of south-western Welsh it was iaith y gweithe (the language
/ dialect of the works i.e. the ironworks and coal mines) (locally this
name was iaith y gwitha).
ORIGIN: From GWENNWYS (= the people of Gwent) (GWENT) +
(plural suffix indicating inhabitants -WYS).
(GWENNWYS = Gwentians) + (-EG sufiix to denote a language or dialect) >
GWENHWYSEG (> Gwentian Gwenwisag)
Doubtless it was pronounced as such when used by dialect
speakers, but no evidence of its use with this pronunciation has been noted by
us as yet.
However, this is the form we have used as the title of the dictionary.
gwerthi [ˡgwɛruɪsag] (nf) Gwentian = the Welsh dialect of Gwent and Morgannwg;
(adj) pertaining to Gwentian (= Gwenhwyseg [gwɛnˡhuɪsɛg])
gwɛ̄s [gwɛ:s] (nm) farm labourer (= gwas [gwa:s])
gwīshon [gwiˡʃɔn]
(pl) (= gweision [gwəɪˡʃɔn] )
gwētas [ˡgwetas] (v) I said (= dywedais [dəˡwedaɪs]). See gweid [gwəɪd] = to say
gwɛ̄th [gwɛ:θ] (adj) worse (= gwaeth [gwaɪθ])
gwētws [ˡgwetʊs] (v) he / she / it said (= dywedodd [dəˡwedɔ]). See gweid [gwəɪd] = to say
Y Gwīla [ə ˡgwila] (nf pl) Christmastime (= Nadolig [naˡdolɪg], Y Gwyliau [ə ˡguilja])
NOTES: (1) The diphthong wy [ui] has become consonant + vowel [wi-]
(compare the southern form of wy [ui] = egg, which is wi [wi:]).
(2) The i- at the beginning of the final syllable is dropped (a usual feature
of the south).
(3) The plural ending -au is -a (a typical
south-eastern feature).
In Catalan, this concept of Christmastime is the same. The Christmas period is
called Les Festes (the feast-days, the twelve days of Christmas, the twelve
days after Christmas Day - December 26 27 28 29 30 31; January 1 2 3 4 5 6).
gwīr [gwi:r] (nm) truth (= gwir [gwi:r])
ī chī'n gweyd clon y
gwīr youre quite right (youre saying the heart of the truth)
gwīr [gwi:r] (adj) true (= gwir [gwi:r])
ītha
gwīr quite true
gwishgo [ˡgwɪʃgɔ]
(v) to wear (= gwisgo [ˡgwɪsgɔ])
gwishgōti [gwɪʃˡgotɪ]
(v) to shelter > gwashgōti
[gwaʃˡgotɪ]
gwītho [gwiθɔ] (v) to work > gweitho
[gwəɪθɔ]
gwītw [ˡgwitʊ] (nf) widow (= gweddw [ˡgweʊ])
y wītw the widow
gwlād [gwla:d]. See gwlɛ̄d [gwlɛ:d]
gwlɛ̄d [gwlɛ:d] (nf) 1/ country 2/ a great quantity (= gwlad [gwla:d])
gwlēdydd [ˡgwledɪ]
(= gwledydd [ˡgwledɪ])
m
n wlɛ̄d ō lō theres an immense amount of coal there
Gwlɛ̄d Myrddin [gwlɛ:d ˡmərɪn] (nf) 1/ poetical name for Sir Gaerfyrddin /
Carmarthenshire
(= Gwlad Myrddin [gwla:d ˡmərɪn]
gw̄pod [ˡgupɔd] (v) know (= gwybod [ˡguɪbɔd])
dim trw̄ w̄pod ī fī
not as far as I know (not through knowing to me)
ɛ̄b yn gw̄pod
ī fī without my knowing;
unintentionally (without a-knowing to me)
fel gw̄ddoch chī as you know
Note 100: www.kimkat.org/amryw/1_geiriaduron/geiriadur-gwenhwyseg-nodiadau_100_wy-cwympo-cwmpo_0195e.htm
gwybōtath [guiˡbotaθ] (nf) knowledge (= gwybodaeth [guiˡbodaɪθ])
gwybōtath gwybētyn ((the)
knowledge (of a) midge)
(expression noted by Gilbert Ruddock in Merthyrtudful)
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A2=welsh-termau-cymraeg;49b0e6c.0306
gwraig [gwraig] (nf) 1/ woman 2/ wife (= gwraig [gwraig])
gwrācadd [ˡgwraka] (= gwragedd [ˡgwragɛ])
Māri ngwraig my wife Mary (= Mari fy ngwraig)
gwrīg [gwri:g] (mass noun) heather (= grug [gri:g])
See grīg
[gri:g]
gwllti [ˡgwiɬtɪ]) (v) rush (= brysio [ˡbrəʃɔ]; in standard Welsh gwylltu [ˡgwiɬtɪ]) usually means to become
angry )
gwētwch wrthi nāg ōs dim īsha īddi wylltu ī
ddōd nl
tell
her theres no need for her to rush to get back
Gwnfi [ˡgwɪnvɪ]) (nf) river name (= Gwynfi [ˡgwənvɪ])
Also
a male forename, from the river name (also slightly Englished in spelling and
spelt with a v, Gwynvi, )
gwnt [gwɪnt] (m) wind (= gwynt [gwɪnt])
gwyntodd [ˡgwɪntɔ]
(pl) winds (= gwyntoedd [ˡgwɪntɔɪ])
gyddyca [gəˡəka] (pl) see gwddf [gʊv] = neck, throat
gyta with
gytag a with him
Also gita
h [aɪʧ] (nf) aitch, name of the letter (= h [aɪʧ])
1 In the south-east of Wales the h is usually
absent. This characterisitic was carried over into the English of south-east
Wales.
The existence of this
trait in the Welsh of this region is probably the result of the influence of
neighbouring Engsh dialects where the h was also absent. It is not a feature
of other Welsh dialects.
2 In general, the existence of the h is
remembered, and it reappears in cases of emphasis in the colloquial register,
or when a speaker uses a more formal register of Welsh (though for some
speakers there is a tendency to hypercorrect, and place an h where it is not
required - a trait also of the English of some speakers in the south-east of
Wales - an eavy piece of hiron Loss of h is not usuual in other varieties
of Welsh. It is probably a feature of pronunciation copied from south-western
English dialects.
In this dictionary, we exclude the h [h] in
Gwentian words.
NOTE:
In the Forest
of Dean, just over the Welsh border in England and contiguous with the
Gwentian-speaking area of Wales, a commentator on the dialect of the forest has
remarked: The letter 'H' be zeldom uzed in Vorest -
'cept wer it zhouldn't be. The letter 'H' can be added to a werd - zpecialy wen
a 'ooman da wun a zound 'posh': Er 'ad a neck az ong az a hostrich. Garge's
dahter uzed ta zing in the Hopera. (Keith Morgan / BBC Where I Live Gloucestershire / http://www.bbc.co.uk/gloucestershire/voices2005/glossary.shtml ) (= The letter H is seldom used in the Forest [of Dean]
except where it shouldnt be. The letter H can be added to a word
especially when a woman wants to sound posh. She had a neck as long as a
hostrich. Georges daughter used to sing in the hopera.
In
The Linguistic Atlas of England / Harold Orton, Stewart Sanderson, John
Widdowson / 2013, it is stated that the initial aspirate [is] typically lost
in English regional speech... [it] is retained in three well-defined areas: the
extreme North [of England], an area from East Anglia to north Sussex, and a
smaller enclave in the South West. That is, h-loss is a typical feature of
English in England, apart from that part of the country bordering on Scotland,
a zone in East Anglia, and one in Somerset.
Examples of h restored erroneously:
ffor
ddes ir Mowntan Hash (...how I came to Mountain Ash). Y Darian. 1 Mehefin 1916.
haf (= summer) > ɛ̄f,
halier (= haulier, mineworker in charge
of horses and drams) > aliar,
hanes (= story, history) > ānas,
Hendref (= place name; winter farm) >
Endra,
heol (= street) > ewl,
hiraeth (= longing) > īrath
hōlo (make a hole) > ōlo,
Examples of hypercorrection with h:
heida (= eida English: idea)
Mowntan Hash (= Mountain Ash)
i [ɪ] in Gwentian in a final syllable for ai
[aɪ] in standard Welsh: e.g. defaid > dēfid, llygaid > llycid,
ychain > ychin
ī Disambiguation (1) preposition = to (standard
Welsh i); (2) personal pronoun = she (standard Welsh hi); (3) this same personal
pronoun used as a preverbal particle (standard Welsh fe); (4) from the verb bod
to be i chi = you are (standard Welsh yr ych chi, yr ydych chi), i chi? =
are you? (standard Welsh a ych (chi)?, a ydych (chi)?), i chi ddim (standard
Welsh nid ych (chi), nid ydych (chi)).
hala [ˡhala] (v)
Gwentian ala [hala]
1/ spend (≡ standard Welsh gwario [ˡgwarjɔ]);
2/ send (≡ standard Welsh anfon [ˡanvɔn])
Origin: hala
is a southern variant of hela.
Standard Welsh has hela [ˡhɛla] and hel [hɛl] (= to hunt; to collect). Generally hel in the north.
From Old Welsh HELGH- [hɛlx] (= hunting,
chasing), cognate with Irish SEALG [ˡhɛla] (obsolete; =
hunting)
ala arian to spend money
ala
amsar to
spend time
1/ ī [i:] (preposition) to (followed by soft mutation of p c
t; bg b d; m ll (rh)
2/ ī [i:] (personal pronoun) she
As an empty pronoun (= one that has no apparent meaning but is a necessary part of a phrase)
bagla ī ō m! get away from
here!, be off with you!, run away! (baglu = run away, dash off)
gwn i odd' m! get away from here!, away with
you!, clear off! (gwanu = stab, prick, penetrate; rush, dash)
3/ ī [i:] (preverbal particle) (= fe [ve:] southern, mi [mi] northern.) These were originally the personal
pronoun before a verb. Mi a welais (= (it is) I who saw) became mi welais i
(empty particle + I saw + I), and in the north was used for all persons (mi
welodd o, instead of fe welodd o). In the south generally, fe (= he) became
the empty particle. In Gwentian, the use of ī (= I) was common (a variant form of fi, with the loss of the
initiall [v], also used with a first-person singular meaning in other
contexts).
ī gwnson they got up
(= fe godasant; the Gwentian
form is actually equivalent to fe
gychwynasant in standard Welsh which
means they began, they set out)
The Welsh Personal
Pronoun / T. Arwyn Watkins / (1977) Word 28:1-2
Speaking of the use of preverbal particles in Llansamlet, Watkins states about
the southern particles FE [ve:] and I [i:]
Both are generalized preverbal particles, and they seem to be in free variation.
The preverbal particle is in fact only found in the spontaneous speech of the
oldest generation, and then only very infrequently. It seems to indicate
emphatic verbal amffirmation: i we-les i e "I DID see him"; ve naθ e ve "He DID do it".... The i could
be either a first singular (vi - i) or a third person singular feminine Since
the first singular form mi does occur in many dialects as a generalized
preverbal particle, whereas the third pcrson singular feminine form hi, as far
as is known, does not, it has taken for granted that the first equation is the
right one.
4/ ī [i:] (verb)
5/ ī [i:] (preposition +
personal pronoun adjective)
Corresponding to standard iw = to him, to her, to their
in Gwentian the two elements merge
as one)
Also in Gwentian as ī-ddi (dd sepates the two
elements)
dōd ī ddiwadd o dan gwmp (= dod iw diwedd) die in a
rockfall (come to his end under a fall)
ā [ˡia] (adv) yes (= e [ˡiɛ])
iāch [ja:x] > iɛ̄ch [jɛ:x]
īcha [ˡixa] (adj) upper, uppermost, top (= uchaf [ˡixav])
Also ycha [ˡəxa]
sh
pen ycha'r cwm ma at
the top end of this valley
īchal [ˡixaɬ] (adj) high (= uchel [ˡixɛl])
Also ychal [ˡəxaɬ]
ī chī [i: ˡxi] (v) 1/ you are, that-you-are (=yr ych chi [ər i:x ˡxi:])
ī chīn gweld (yr ych chin gweld) = you
see (depending on style and context, etc, the verb BOD may be dropped leaving
only chīn gweld.
ī-ddi [ˡiɪ] (prep + possessive determiner) 1/ to his (+ soft
mutation) 2/ to her (+ aspirate mutation) 3/ to their (no mutation follows) (= iw
[iu])
ī-ddi blant to his children (=
iw blant)
ī-ddi phlant to her children (=
iw phlant)
ī-ddi plant to their children
(= iw plant)
ī -ddi dla nw (= iw dal hwy) to catch
them
See also ī (5)
idit [ˡidjət] (nm) idiot (= ynfytyn [ənˡvətɪn])
paid ācor dēna,
yr idiot dont open your mouth, you idiot;
dont say a word, you idiot
iɛ̄ch [jɛ:x] (adj) healthy (= iach
[ja:x])
iēchyd [ˡjexɪd] (nm) health (= iechyd [ˡjexɪd])
iēchyd dɛ̄ cheers! (a toast = (your) good health)
collich iēchyd lose your health
Iēfan [ˡjevan] (nm) John (= Ifan [ˡivan])
Also: Ēfan [ˡevan]
(Other spellings: Iefan, Jefan)
īfa [ˡiva] (sentence substitute) 1/ isnt that right? isnt that
so? (= ai ef [ˡaɪ e:v]); 2/ (interrogative particle) isnt it (x) (which is /
was, etc) (= ai [aɪ]);
Also iāfa
(Other spellings: ifa)
īfad [ˡivad] (v) drink (= yfed [ˡəvɛd])
(Other spellings: ifad)
Iforiad
Eisteddfod Iforiaid Aber-dr (probably in Gwentian
Steddfod Ifori-id Aber-dɛ̄r) Held in 1876
gnrans [ˡɪgnərans] (nm) ignorance (= anwybodaeth [anˡuibodaɪθ)
(Other spellings: ignorans)
ī gȳd [i: ˡgi:d] (adv) all (= i
gyd [i: ˡgi:d])
An example of its use in a nickname
(equivalent to Ddwywaith = twice) is
when a forename and surname are the same.
Thus Jenkin Jenkins, or Siencyn Siencyn as
his name would have been in Welsh, a well-known nineteenth-century minister,
was known as Siencyn i Gyd (= all Siencyn).
Mae arnaf fi dri enw, Syr; yr un a fynoch ai Jenkin
Jenkins, Siencyn i Gyd, neu Siencyn Ddwywaith.
(= I have three names (there are on me three names),
whichever you want Jenkin Jenkins, All Siencyn or Siencyn Twice)
(1803 (Llangyfelach) 1886) Hanes Unwaith Am Siencyn Ddwywaith; Sef Y Pethau Mwyaf
Hynod Yn Ei Fywyd, Yn Nghyda Rhai Traethodau, A Thalfyriadau Oi Bregethau,
&c., &c.; Hefyd Ychydig Awgrymiadau Am Minnesota, Ar Cymry A
Wladychant Yno. (= a one-time history of Siencyn Twice; namely the most
remarkable things in his life, and abridged versions of his sermons, etc etc;
also descriptions of Minnesota, and the Welsh people dwelling there). Jenkin
Jenkins. 1873. Remsen, Efrog Newydd. (= New York) www.kimkat.org/amryw/1_testunau/sion_prys_087_Siencyn Ddwywaith_1872_090106_2667k.htm)
(Other spellings: i gyd, i_gyd)
īlod [ˡilɔd] (nm) 1/ member 2/ member of a chapel (= aelod [ˡixɛl])
Also ychal [ˡəxaɬ]
īn [i:n] (num) one (= un [i:n])
infrytol [ɪnˡvrətɔl] (adj) unanimous (= unfrydol [ɪnˡvrədɔl])
(BRYD = mind), (UNFRYD = one mind) + (-OL adjectival
suffix) > UNFRYDOL (> Gwentian INFRYTOL)
(Other spellings: unfrytol, hunfrytol)
int [ɪnt] (nf) hint (= awgrym [ˡaugrɪm])
ints [ɪnts] (pl) hints (= awgrymiadau [augrəɪmˡjadaɪ])
From English HINT
insylto [ˡɪnsəltɔ] (v) insult (= sarhau [sarˡhaɪ])
English TO INSLT. (INSLT) + (-IO verbal suffix) >
INSYLTIO > INSYLTO
into [ˡɪntɔ] (v) hint (= awgrymu [auˡgrəmɪ])
(HINT = hint, suggestion) + (-O verb suffix) > HINTO > INTO
Ioi [jɔɪ] (nm) Thursday; Jupiter (= Iau [jaɪ])
dȳdd
Ioi Thursday
(Other forms and spellings: Iou)
ionc [jɔŋk] (nm) fool, idiot (= ffŵl [fu:l])
Short form of ioncyn
= fool, idiot.
From a forename Ioncyn (= little John).
Cf iolyn = fool, idiot, =
a diminutive form of the forename Iorwerth (IOLO > IOL- + diminutive suffix
-YN).
Iōrath [ˡjoraθ] (nm) forename. See Iorwarth
[ˡjɔrwɛrθ])
Iorwarth [ˡjɔrwarθ] (nm) forename (= Iorwerth [ˡjɔrwɛrθ])
Anglicised as Edward, although there is no real connection only an apparent
similarity in form.
As a surname it is found as Iōrath [ˡjoraθ] (spelt Yorath in English)
(IR = lord) + soft mutation + (GWERTH = value, worth)
īpo [ˡipɔ] (adv) past (= heibio [ˡhəɪbjɔ])
īrath [ˡiraθ] (nm) longing, nostlagia (= hiraeth [ˡhiraɪθ])
cɛ̄l pwl ō īrath
feel a bout of nostalgia
HĪRATH > ĪRATH
irto [ˡɪrtɔ]
(v) confuse (= drysu [ˡ drəsɪ], hurtio [ˡhirtjɔ])
(HURT = confused) + (verbal suffix -IO) > HURTIO >
Gwentian HURTO > URTO > IRTO
isha [ˡɪʃa] (adj) 1/ (comparison between three or more) lowest 2/
(comparison between two) lower (= isaf [ˡɪsav])
īsha [ˡiʃa] 1/ (nm) need, necessity 2/ (v) want (= eisiau [ˡəɪʃaɪ])
NOTE:
(1) In the South, a penult diphthong ei becomes half-long vowel i
[i]
(2) In the South, an s in before i becomes sh. Hence South-western īshe [ˡiʃɛ]
(3) A final au [ai] is colloquially e [ɛ]. Along a broad south-west to north-east axis, it remains
as e, but in the south-east, a final e > a.
Ishlawr-cōd [ˡɪʃlaur ˡko:d] (-) place name (= Islawr-coed [ˡɪslaur ˡkɔɪd])
(below the wood: (islaw = below) + (yr = the) + (coed =
wood))
"BEDWELLTY, a
parish in the lower division of the hundred of Wentllooge, in the county of
Monmouth, 7 miles to the W. of Pont-y-pool. Newport is its post town. It is
situated in a hilly district between the river Rumney, on the W., and the
Sirhowey on the E., and contains the chapelries of Rhymney and Tredegar, the
latter being now a market town, and the hamlets of Ishlawrcoed, Mamhole, and Uwchlawrcoed. The district is rich in iron
and coal, and is the seat of an extensive iron manufacture, giving employment
to above 1,300 hands. Between 3,000 and 4,000 persons are engaged in the great
ironworks and collieries in the vicinity." The National Gazetteer of Great
Britain and Ireland (1868).
itshwr [ˡɪʧʊr] (nm) mineworker who couples or
uncouples coal trams (= hitsiwr [ˡhɪʧʊr])
Dic yr Itshwr (Tarian y Gweithiwr. 2 Tachwedd 1905) Dic (= Dick,
Richard) the Hitcher name of a mineworker
From English HITCHER, with Welsh agent
suffix -WR replacing English agent suffix -ER; HITSHWR > ITSHWR, if not
HITSH- (stem of the verb HITSHO) + (-WR agent suffix)
ishta [ˡɪʃta] (v) sit (= eistedd [ˡəɪstɛ])
ffwrwm ishta bench, bench seat,
settle (bench [for] sitting)
ishta [ˡɪʃta] (prep) like (= fel [vɛl])
Before a vowel: ishtag
[ˡɪʃtag]
m fa'n gwmws ishta'i frawd hes just like his brother
ishtag wyt tī such as you are
r ɛ̄n declyn balch ishtag wyt tī you cheeky
old thing (the old proud instrument / derogatory term for a person)
ORIGIN: contraction of yr īn shẁd (= the same form as) (= standard Welsh: yr un sut )
Other spellings: isht a, ishta
iss [ɪs] 1/ (sentence substitute) (in speaking English, yes
was pronounced in this way by speakers with a poor command of the language) (in
fact, this is a form of yes found in the West Country of England e.g. Devon)
2/ (verb) the pronunciation of is fomerly by Welsh-speakers with a poor
command of English
ītha [ˡiθa] (adv) quite (= eithaf [ˡəɪθav])
(eithaf does no cause soft mutation; i.e. adjectives in
the superlative degree generally with -AF, and in this case as an adverb,
before an adjective or noun do not trigger any mutation)
ītha
dɛ̄
quite good
ītha
gwīr quite true
Iwco [ˡiukɔ] (nm) Hugh (= Huwco [ˡhiukɔ])
(HUW = Hugh) + (-CO diminutive suffix) > HUWCO
(Gwentian UWCO (loss of initial H) > IWCO = respelling with i )
īto [ˡitɔ] (v) heed, worry (= hidio [ˡhɪdjɔ])
ond
pīdwch īto but
dont worry
(other forms and spellings: ito)
jac [ʤak] (nm) small tin bottle (= jac [ʤak])
jacs [ʤaks] (pl) (= jacs [ʤaks]
jac [ʤak] (nm) 1/ person
bōb jac every one
bōb jac ō nhw̄ every single one of them
2/ (in nicknames for inhabitants of certain places) (= jac [ʤak])
a/ Abi Jacs =
inhabitants of Mynachlog-nedd
From English Abbey Jacks - Mynachlog-nedd is called Neath Abbey by the
English.
Yr Abi Jacs ar Mera brīd
Dōs dim ōu bɛ̄th nw̄ yn y bȳd
The Abbey Jacks and the Mera breed (people from a part of Castell-nedd),
Theres nobody like them (theres nothing of their sort) in the
world"
Source: Tafodieithoedd Morgannwg / T. Jones, Ysgol y Cyngor, Dunraven,
Treherbert / Y Grail, Volume 4, No. 13 (1911)
b/ Jacs Byrtwa Swansea Jacks, inhabitants of Abertawe
From English JACK, possibly here in the sense of knave, rogue, rascal, a
meaning first noted in English around 1200.
jlws [ˡjɛlʊs] (nm) jealous (= cenfigennus [kɛnvɪˡgɛnɪs]
m fn jlws ẁtho chī hes jealous of you
(Other spellings: jelws)
jist [jɪst] (adv) almost (= bron [brɔn]
m f jist mynd yn ry*
ddiwiol ī sgrifennu īr Darian hes almost become too godly to write for the Darain
newspaper
jbyn [ˡjɔbɪn] (nm) job (= gwaith [gwaɪθ])
gnīthir jbyn teidi ī (blannir pytatws) do a fine job of (planting
the potatoes)
(Other spellings: jobyn)
joino [ˡjoɪnɔ] (v) join (= ymuno [əˡminɔ a:])
l In standard Welsh there is no symbol for
a former long l as doubling the l gives ll which serves for another
sound. In Catalan, a similar problem occurs a gemiknated l cannot be
represented by ll as the symbol ll serves for another sound. In Catalan the
symbol ll is used to overcome this. In Welsh, however, no symbol was devised
as it only presents a probelm in southern Welsh, where there exist half-long
vowels in a penultimate syllable. In the North such vowels are short.
Here we mark a vowel with a grave accent to show that the
vowel is not half-long as the l was originally long. This: clon (= heart).
Such words might be native Welsh words, or borrowings
from English.
Native words: clon
(= heart).
From English: jlws [ˡjɛlʊs]
lando [ˡlandɔ] (v) to land (= glanio [ˡglanjɔ], tirio [ˡtɪrjɔ])
lanlord [ˡlanlɔrd] (nm) landlord = tavern-keeper (= tafarnwr [taˡvarnʊr])
lanlordz [ˡlanlɔrdz] (pl)
landlords = tavern-keepers (= tafarnwyr [taˡvarnwɪr])
From English LANLORD < LANDLORD
lf [lav] (nm) lavatory, toilet (= toiled [ˡtɔɪlɛd])
lfz [lavz] (pl) (= toiledau [tɔɪˡledaɪ])
Tsharli Cnai Lavz (nickname) Charlie (of he) cleaning of toilets, Charlie
who cleans toilets
Charlie Cnau Lavs Llysenwau Pontardawe a'r Cylch (=
nicknames of Pontardawe and the neighbouring area)
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cwmgors/Llysenwauponty.html
ORIGIN: English LAV, a shortening of LAVATORY
(Other spellings: laf)
lēdo [ˡledɔ] (v) lead (= arwain [ˡarwaɪn])
(Other spellings: ledo)
leflan [ˡlevlan] (nf) coal level (= lefel [ˡlefɛl])
lefēlydd# [lɛˡvelɪ] (= lefelydd [lɛˡvelɪ])
(Other spellings: leflen)
lico [ˡlɪcɔ] (v) like (= hoffi [ˡhofɪ], leicio [ˡləɪkjɔ])
llādd [ɬaː]. See llɛ̄dd [ɬɛ:]
(Other spellings: lladd)
llaish [ɬaɪʃ] (nm) voice (= llais [ɬaɪs])
PLURAL: lleisha /
llisha [ˡɬəɪʃa, ˡɬiʃa] (= lleisiau [ˡɬəɪsja])
gita cryndod yn ī
laish in a shaky voice
llāth [ɬaːθ]. See llɛ̄th [ɬɛ:θ]
(Other spellings: llath)
Llanfāchas [ɬanˡvaxas] (nf) place name (= Llanfaches [ɬanˡvaxɛs])
(in a a parish-register entry for a marriage:
5 Nov 1745 Edward Morgan of ye parish of Lanvachas [and] Elizth Morgan of ye
parish of Lanishen) [though Llanishan with [a] might be expected]
Llanfapla# [ɬanˡvapla] (nf) place name (= Llanfable [ɬanˡvablɛ]) kimkat2187k
NOTES: This village is in Llan-arth Fawr parish,
Sir Fynwy. The local form would be Llanfapla (confirmation needed)
(1) the final e becomes a;
(2) and the [b] at the beginning of the final syllable becomes devoiced to
[p].
The English form of the name is Llanvapley which shows the b / p dialect
feature in Welsh.
(The English form is in fact the Welsh name showing the influence of a local
pronunciation and interference from English spelling conventions)
Llanfāpon [ɬanˡvapɔn]
Llanfīgan [ɬanˡvigan] (nf) place name (= Llanfeugan [ɬanˡvəɪgan])
LLANVIGAN, or LLANVEUGAN (LLAN-FEIGAN), a parish, comprising the Upper and
Lower divisions, in the hundred of Pencelly, union and county of Brecknock,
South Wales, 4 miles (S. E. by S.) from Brecknock. This place derives its name
from the dedication of its church to St. Veugan, or Meugan. Lewis, Samuel A., A
Topographical Dictionary of Wales (1849)
(Other spellings: Llanfigan)
Llangātwg [ɬanˡgatʊg] (f) Llangatwg; Gwentian
form of Llangadog [ɬanˡgadɔg]
(Other spellings: Llangatwg)
Llangātwg Lingod [ɬanˡgatʊg ˡlɪŋgɔd] (f) (= Llangatwg Lingoed [ɬanˡgatʊg ˡliŋgɔɪd])
(Grosmont Parish Register mentions Walter, son of James Preece alias Pritchard
of Langattocke Lingod, baptised 4 November 1638.)
Llanishan [ɬanˡɪʃan] (f) (= Llanisan [ɬanˡɪsan]). Name of two villages; 1/ one now a suburb of
Caer-dydd / Cardiff, and 2/ the other in Sir Fynwy / Monmouthshire, seven miles
south-west of Trefynwy / Monmouth.
The English form is Llanishen, a variant in Welsh from a partial
standardisation of the name, retaining the sh instead of using the standard
s; and assuming that the final a is the Gwentian final a, which takes the
place of final e in words in standard Welsh. However, in this case, it would
seem that the a is original and not a substitution of e. Isan was the name
of a Welsh saint who lived in the 500s. The saints name is seen in the
pseudonym of the poet Dewi Isan, who lived in Llys-faen (Gwentian: Llȳs-fɛ̄n),
author of the poem Ceuffordd y Cefn Onn (= The Cefn On Tunnel) which was
victorious in the 1873 Llys-faen eisteddfod.
Llanōfar [ɬanˡofar] (f) Gwentian form of Llanfyfyr [ɬanˡvəvɪr]
(Other spellings: Llansamlad, Llansamled)
Llansamlat [ɬanˡsamlat] (f) Gwentian form of Llansamlat [ɬanˡsamlɛt]
(Other spellings: Llanover, Llanovar, Llanofer)
Llanshāwal [ɬanˡʃawal] (f) (= Llansawel [ɬanˡsawɛl]); called by the English Briton Ferry.
(Other spellings: Llanshawal)
Llansteffan [ɬanˡstefan] (f) (= Llansteffan [ɬanˡstefan]); village in Sir Gaerfyrddin / Carmarthenshire.
Also: Llanstyffan [ɬanˡstəfan]
Llantrisant [ɬanˡtrɪsant] (f) (= Llantrisant [ɬanˡtrɪsant); 1/ town in former Sir
Forgannwg / Glamorganshire. Short name: Y
Llan. 2/ village in former Sir Fynwy / Monmouthshire.
llaw [ɬau] (nf) hand (= llaw [ɬau])
dīlo [ˡdilɔ] (pl) (= dwylo [ˡduilɔ])
The plural is literally
two hand, i.e. two hands.
(DWY = feminine form of DAU
= two) + soft mutation + (LLAW = hand) > DWYLAW > standard Welsh DWYLO.
llawas [ˡɬauwas] (nf) sleeve (= llawes [ˡɬauɛs])
llewys [ˡɬɛuɪs] (pl) (= llewys [ˡɬɛuɪs])
ai lewys weti torchi with his sleeves rolled up (= wedi i torchi / standard:
wedi eu torchi after their rolling)
llechwan [ˡɬɛxwan] (nm) bakestone, griddle; broad flat stone (= llechfaen [ˡɬɛxvan])
llechfeini# [ɬɛxˡvəɪnɪ] (pl) (= llechfeini [ɬɛxˡvəɪnɪ])
bāra
llechwan [ˡbara ˡɬɛxwan] griddle bread; bread baked on a griddle
or bakestone (either with yeast or unleavened)
(LLECH = stone slab; bakestone; slte; writing-slate) +
soft mutation + (MAEN = stone) > LLECHFAEN > (Gwentian) LLECHFAN >
LLECHWAN (showing the not unusual change of v > w)
llēd [ɬe:d] (adv) fairly, quite (= lled [ˡɬe:d])
bōd yn llēd ddɛ̄ be fairly good, be quite good
llɛ̄dd [ɬɛ:] (v) kill (= lladd [ɬaː])
cɛ̄l ī llɛ̄dd be killed (`get his
killing)
llɛ̄th [ɬɛ:θ] (nm) milk (= llaeth [ɬaɪθ])
llēti [ˡɬetɪ] (v) spread (= lledu [ˡɬedɪ])
llētich ūnan ō flɛ̄n...
(GPC) (1) spread out in front of
(the fire, etc) (2) show off in front of...
mi lētws ī bapir ā
dechreuws darllin he opened out his newspaper and began to read
llētar [ˡɬetar] (m) leather (= lledr [ˡɬedɛr])
llicad [ˡɬɪkad] > llycad [ˡɬəkad]
Llīn [ˡɬi:n] (nm) Monday (= Llun [ˡɬi:n])
dȳ Llīn Monday (= dydd
Llun [di: ˡɬi:n])
Llindan [ˡɬəndan] > (f) London (= Llundain [ˡɬɪndaɪn])
Also: Llyndan [ˡɬəndan]
llīti [ˡɬitɪ] (nm) ash (= lludw [ˡɬidʊ])
(Other forms and spellings: llutu, lludu)
Lloigar [ˡɬɔɪgar] (f) England (= Lloegr [ˡɬɔɪgɛr])
(Other spellings: Lloegar, Loegar, Loigar, Lloeger,
Loeger, Lloiger, Loiger)
llon llāfur [ˡɬɔn ˡɬavɪr] (nm) poppy
(Papaver rhoeas) (= llygad y cythraul [ˡɬəgad ə ˡkərθaɪl])
llonna llafur# [ˡɬɔna ˡɬavɪr] (pl) (= blodau llygad y cythraul [ˡblodaɪ ˡɬəgad ə ˡkərθaɪl])
MEANING: ((the) merry (flower) (of the) corn)
SOURCE: GPC
llycad [ˡɬəkad] (nm) eye (= llygad [ˡɬəgad])
llycid [ˡɬəkɪd]
(pl) eyes (= llygaid [ˡɬəgaɪd]
Also: llicad [ˡɬɪkad] (pl) llicid [ˡɬɪkɪd]
doi licad two eyes
llycad trō cross eye
llycad cam cross eye
bāchan chanto doi lycad trō
a cross-eyed fellow ( a fellow with two cross eyes)
llygōtan [ɬəˡgotan] (nf) mouse(= llygoden [ɬəˡgodɛn]
llycod [ˡɬəkad] (m) (= llygod [ˡɬəgɔd])
fel cɛ̄th yn watsho llygōtan like a cat watching a mouse
Llyndan [ˡɬəndan]. See Llindan
[ˡɬɪndan])
lojo [ˡlɔjɔ] (v) lodge (= lletya [ɬɛˡtia])
From English LODGE
llach [ˡlɔlax] (v) 1/ lounge around, loll about (= gorweddian [gɔrˡwɛjan]) 2/ llach
sh bother with, bother about 3/ (m) nonsense
a rw llach felna a nonsense like that (a rhyw lolach fel yna. The
Cambrian 17-08-1900)
From English LOLL (LOL) + (verbal suffix -ACH)
lowt [lout] (nm) lout (= dihiryn [dɪˡhirɪn])
lowts [louts]) (pl) (= dihirod [dɪˡhirɔd]
From English LOUT
lwc [ˡlʊk] (nf) luck (= lwc [ˡlʊk])
English LUCK [ˡlʊk], an older pronunciation (and still current
in Englih dialects), now [lʌk]
lwcis [ˡlʊkɪs] (adj) lucky (= lwcus [ˡlʊkɪs]).
(LWC = luck) + (-US = adjectival suffix) > LWCUS (>
Gwentian LWCIS)
lwco [ˡlʊkɔ] (v) be lucky, be fortunate (= bod yn ffodus [bo:d ən ˡfodɪs]).
falla lwci dī ī... maybe
youll be lucky enough to..
wī wēti lwco yn lled ddɛ̄ bōb
trō gyta'r pytatws
Ive always been fairly lucky with the potatoes
(LWC = luck) + (-IO =
verbal suffix) > LWCIO (> Gwentian LWCO)
lwcowt [ˡlʊkout] (v) look-out (= gwyliaduriaeth [gwɪljaˡdʊrjaɪθ])
bōd ar y lwcowt am [ˡlʊkaut] (v) be on the look-out for (= cadw golwg am [ˡkadʊ ˡgolʊg am])
From English LOOK-OUT
(Other spellings: lwc owt, lwc-owt, look-out)
m [ma] (v) is, there is
emphatic: mɛ̄ [mɛ:]
m [ma] clipped form of dyma
= heres (literally: here you see)
(Other spellings and forms: ma, ma)
m [ma] clipped form of yma
= here
(Other spellings and forms: ma, ma)
māci [ˡmakɪ] (v) rear, raise, bring up, nurture (=
magu [ˡmagɪ])
main [maɪn] (adj) (1) slender, thin, slim (2) (sound)
shrill (= main [maɪn])
yr iaith fain English (the shrill
language)
mālath [ˡmalaθ] (nm) chilblain (= malaith [ˡmalaɪθ])
malītha [maˡliθa])
(pl) (= maleithiau [maˡləɪθjaɪ])
mn [ma:n] > mɛ̄n [mɛ:n] = stone; standing stone, monolith
mandral [ˡmandral] (nm) miners pick (= mandrel [ˡmandrɛl])
mandrēli [ˡmandrelɪ] (pl) (= mandreli
[ˡmandrelɪ])
mandral gwīlod [ˡgwilɔd] large heavy pick (= mandrel gwaelod [ˡmandrɛl ˡgwəɪlɔd])
Māpon [ˡma:pɔn] (nm) William Abraham (Cwmafan, 14 June 1842 14 May
1922), bardic name Gwilym Mabon or Mabon by this latter name he was
universally known. Trade unionist, Liberal/Labour politician, eisteddfodwr,
tenor singer. Member of Parliament (MP) for 35 years from 1885 to 1920. (= Mabon [ˡmabɔn])
dy Llun Māpon (Mabons Monday). Between 1892 and 1898 mineworkers had
a day off on the first Monday of each month in order to reduce productiona and
to stabilise wages.
dy
Mawrth wētir Māpon (the Tuesday after Mabons day). (11 Ebrill 1895 /
Tarian y Gweithiwr / dydd Mawrth wedir Mabon)
(delwedd 5944)
(delwedd 5970)
Tarian y Weithiwr. 8 Awst 1918.
...cwnad prish. Bachan, bachan, mynta Shoni, "ma'r
hen goliars yna'n mynd i gl cwnad prish yto. Fuo i yn u mitin nhw dydd Satwn
dwetha yn Merthyr, a ma wedi setlo fod dou swllt y bunt o gwnad i fod yto. A
ma nhw'n siwr o'i gal a, mynta Wil, oblecid mae Mapon gyta nhw yn y
Parlament. Beth tin wilia, " medde Shoni, beth sy gyta Mabon i neud
yn y Parlament. Nid yno ma nhw'n setlo pethach fel hyn. Ond wyt ti dim yn
meddwl, Wil, fod yn llawn bryd i ni gl cwnad prish yn awr?" Bryd!
Oti'n....
Tarian y Weithiwr. (= The Worker's Shield). 8 August 1918
...pay rise. "My friend, my friend, said Shoni,
"those bloomin colliers are going to get another pay rise. I was in their
meeting on Saturday in Merthyr, and theyve settled that a pay rise of two
shillings in the pound is due once more. And they're sure to get it, said
Will because they have Mapon / Mabon with them in the parliament. What are
you talking about? said Shoni, "what's it got to do with Mabon in the
Parlament?Thats not where things like that are settled. But dont you think,
Will, that its high time for us to have a pay rise now? Time? yes...
marc [mark] (nm) mark (= marc [mark])
marca [ˡmarka]) (pl) (= marciau [ˡmarkjaɪ])
sh marca (tua marcau =
towards the marks of) 1/ (place) around 2/ (time) at around, at approximately
sh marca Cwm-bɛ̄ch around
Cwm-bach
sh marca mīsh nesa sometime
next month
marcad [ˡmarkad] (nm) marking (= marciad [ˡmarkjad])
shr marcad pimp around five o
clock
Marcad [ˡmarkad] (nf) Margaret (= Marged [ˡmargɛd])
Māri [ˡMarɪ] (nf) Mary (= Mair [maɪr])
plant Māri Irish people ((the)
children (of) (the Virgin) Mary)
mās [ma:s] > mɛ̄s [mɛ:s]
mashgal [ˡmaʃgal] (nm) pod, shell (= masgl [ˡmasgal])
mashgla# [ˡmaʃgla] (pl) (= masglau [ˡmasglaɪ])
mashgal wī eggshell
matryd [ˡmatrɪd] (v) get undressed (=
dadwisgo [dadˡwɪsgɔ],
ymddihatru
[əmɪˡhatrɪ])
From YMDDIHATRYD > (YMHATRYD) >
YMATRYD > MATRYD. The standard form has the verbal suffix -U; here the
verbal suffix -YD is used. (YM- reflexive prefix = self) + soft mtuation +
(DIHATRYD = undress). DIHATRYD is (DI- privative prefix) + (HATRYD = to clothe,
to attire). (HATR-) + (verbal suffix -YD). HATER is from Middle English ATER
(e.g. 1330 with fair ater with fine
clothing), equivalent to modern English ATTIRE. From Norman French ATIRIER (=
put in order; prepare, equip; adorn, dress in fine clothes) (A- = Latin AD,
preposition and prefix = to) + (TIRE = order, row). TIRE in modern
English is TIER (= rank, level), probably from Old French TIRER (= draw, pull).
GPC notes MATRYD as a
south-western-Welsh form.
matshan [ˡmaʧan] (nf) match (phosphorous, etc) (= matsien [ˡmaʧɛn])
matshiz [ˡmaʧɪz] (pl) (= matsis [ˡmaʧɪs])
rō fatshan ī fī give
me a match
mɛ̄ [mɛ:] (verb) is (= mae [maɪ])
(Other forms and spellings: m,
m)
mɛ̄b [mɛ:b] (nm) son (= mab [mab])
meibon [ˡməɪbɔn]
(pl) sons (= meibion [ˡməɪbɔn])
Also mībon
[ˡmibɔn]
= sons
Llangātwg Fībon
Āfal [ɬanˡgatʊg
ˡvibɔn
ˡaval] village name (qv)
(other spellings: meb,
mb, mibon, feibon, fibon, vibon, veibon)
mēddw [ˡmeʊ] (adj) drunk (= meddw [ˡmeʊ])
mēddw fawr steaming drunk, stinking drunk, as drunk as a lord.
(delwedd 5791)
David Edwards (Feddw
Mawr) was charged by P. C. Melhuish with being drunk and riotous at Ynysgau.
Fined 5s. and 2s. 6d. costs, and allowed a week to pay. Daniel Murphy, charged
with similar offences by P. C. Cole, at Bute Terrace, Pontlottyn, Rhymney, was
fined in a similar amount and costs.
meddwi [ˡmɛwɪ] (v) (1) get drunk (= meddwi [ˡmɛwɪ]); (2) get dizzy (Y Darian
20-04-1916) (= penfeddwi [pɛnˡvɛwɪ])
mēddwl [ˡmeʊl] (v) think (= meddwl [ˡmeʊl])
mēddwl dī nawr... just
imagine (that...)
feddylas ī ariōd...
I never thought (that)...
meddwlwch [mɛˡulʊx],
fechgyn, am... think, lads / my friends, about... (= meddwliwch [mɛˡəljʊx])
meibon [ˡməɪbɔn]
(pl) sons (= meibion [ˡməɪbɔn]). See mA-Eb
[mɛ:b] = son
(other spellings: mibon,
feibon, fibon, vibon, veibon)
Y Meindy [ə ˡməɪndɪ]
(nm) place name (= Y Maendy [ə ˡməɪndɪ])
mēlin [ˡmelɪn] (nf) mill (= melin [ˡmelɪn])
melīna [mɛˡlina] (pl) (= melinoedd [mɛˡlinɔɪ])
membar [ˡmɛmbar] (nm) member (= aelod [ˡəɪlɔd])
membra [ˡmɛmbra] (pl) (= aelōdau [əɪˡlodaɪ])
This Englishism is not found in modern standard
Welsh, though sporadic examples of it are found in earlier periods: membr, membrau [ˡmɛmbɛr, ˡmɛmbraɪ]
ETYMOLOGY: English MEMBER
See kimkat0928k / Nin Doi / page 99
mɛ̄n [mɛ:n] (adj) fine, small (= mn [ma:n])
gwair mɛ̄n
short-stalked
hay
Gwair Man ar Werth. AMRYW dynellau am bris rhesymol. Ymofyner yn 36, High-St.,
Hirwain.
(delwedd 5783)
mɛ̄n [mɛ:n] (nm) 1/ stone 2/ standing stone (= maen [maɪn])
Rȳd-y-mɛ̄n [ˡri:d ə ˡmain] (nf) place name (= Rhyd-y-maen [ˡhri:d ə ˡmain])
mɛ̄n [mɛ:n] (adj) dine (0 in small particles) (= mn [ma:n])
torrin
fɛ̄n cut
into small peices, break into small pieces
menta-nw [ˡmɛnta nʊ] they say (= meddant hwy [ˡmeant huɪ])
menyw [ˡmɛniu] (nf) woman (= gwraig [gwraɪg])
menywod [mɛˡniuɔd] (pl) (= gwragedd [ˡgwragɛ]))
Also myniwod
[məˡnɪwɔd]
merch [mɛrx] (m) girl: daughter (= merch [mɛrx])
merchad [ˡmɛrxad] (pl)
girls; daughters (= merched [ˡmɛrxɛd])
Also merchid [ˡmɛrxɪd]
Merthyrtydfil [ˡmɛrθɪrˡtədvɪl]
(m) (= Merthyrtudful [ˡmɛrθɪrˡtɪdvɪl] [mɛrx]).
The English form is in fact the name of the town in Gwentian; standard Welsh
uses the standard literary name for place names wherever possible.
mɛ̄s [mɛ:s] (nm) field (= maes [maɪs])
mɛ̄s [mɛ:s] (adv) 1/ outside (location) = on the outside; 2/ outside (movement)
= to the outside (= i maes [ɪ maɪs]; allan [ˡaɬan])
roir gōla m**s turn off the light
NOTES:
In south-west Wales in monosyllables ae[ai] becomes ā [a:].
Ī maes becomes mās. (The preposition ī
is dropped)
In the south-east ā [a:] > ɛ̄ [ɛ :]. So maes > mās > mɛ̄s.
Mthadis (pn) Methodist (= Methodist)
mībon [ˡmibɔn] (pl) sons (= meibion [ˡməɪbɔn]). See mA-Eb [mɛ:b]
= son
(other spellings: mibon,
feibon, fibon, vibon, veibon)
mīl [mi:l] (nm) thousand (= mil [mi:l])
mīlodd [ˡmilɔ] (pl) (= misledd [ˡmilɔɪ])
mīlodd ar fīlodd
ō.... thousands and thousands
of..., thousands upon thousands of...
mintan [ˡmɪntan] (v) argue (= ymrafaelio [əmraˡvəɪljɔ], cweryla [kwɛˡrəla])
Pwy fintan ch gīlydd ī chī? What are you arguing
about? (What arguing with your fellow are you?)
ETYMOLOGY: probably from English MAINTAIN.
mīsh [mi:ʃ] (nm) month (= mis [mi:s])
mishodd [ˡmɪʃɔ] (pl) (= misoedd [ˡmɪsɔɪ])
mōr īr mīsh pump (South Wales) said of a
long wait as long as a month of five (Saturdays) The last Saturday of the
month was a payday, when the months wages were paid; but some months have five
Saturdays if the first Saturday falls on the first, second or third day of the
month
(mor = as) + (hir = long) + ( = as) + (mish,
southern form of mis = month) + (pump = five)
mishtir [ˡmɪʃtɪr] (nm) mister; employer, factory or mine owner (= meistr [ˡməɪstɪr])
mistc [mɪˡstəɪk] (nm) mistake (= camgymeriad [kamgəˡmɛrjad])
mistcs [mɪˡstəɪks] (pl) (=camgymeriadau [kamgəmɛrˡjadaɪ])
mistc cɛ̄s a bad mistake
From English MISTAKE
miwn [mɪʊn] (prep) in (= mewn [ˡmɛʊn])
Also mwn [m ]
mlān [mla:n] (adv) forward (= ymlaen [əˡmlaɪn]). See YMLAEN.
mlɛ̄n [mlɛ:n] (adv) forward (= ymlaen [əˡmlaɪn]). See YMLAEN.
mōb [mo:b] (determiner) every (form of POB after the
preposiyion YN) (= mhob [ˡmho:b])
ym mōb tw̄ll chornal in every nook and cranny,
everywhere (in every hole and corner)
mocan [ˡmɔkan] (v) 1 mock (= gwawdio [ˡgwaudjɔ]); 2 mimic, imitate (= dynwared [dənˡwarɛd])
(MOC, i.e. English MOCK) + (verb suffix -AN, often
indicating continuous activity)
(delwedd 5876)
A Glossary of Words and Phrases used in S. E.
Worcestershire / Jesse Salisbury / 1893
Mock, v. to imitate; to mimic
mōdd [mo:] (m) bald (= modd [mo:])
fel mār
gwīthar mōdd unfortunately (as is (the) worst (of) the manner / way
/ mode)
mōl [mo:l] (m) bald (= moel [mɔɪl])
montish [ˡmɔntɪʃ] (nm) advantage (= mantais [ˡmantaɪs])
cymryd montish ar take advantage of
mr [mo:r] (nm) sea (= mr [mo:r])
mōrodd [ˡmorɔ] (pl) seas (= moroedd [ˡmorɔɪ])
dŵr y mr the seaside ((the)
water (of) the sea)
yn nŵr y mr at the seaside
mōrwn [ˡmorʊn]) (nf) maid (= morwyn [ˡmorʊin])
mōrynion [mɔˡrənjɔn] (pl) maids (= morwynion [mɔˡruinjɔn]
mosod [ˡmɔsɔd] (v) attack (= ymosod [əˡmɔsɔd])
YMOSOD (literally: put oneself) < (YM- reflexive
prefix) + soft mutation + (GOSOD = to put, place)
mostwng [ˡmɔstʊŋ] (v) submit (= ymostwng [əˡmɔstʊŋ])
YMOSTWNG (literally: lower oneself) < (YM- reflexive
prefix) + soft mutation + (GOSTWNG = to lower)
moyn [mɔɪl] (v) want (= dymuno [dəˡminɔ], ymofyn [əˡmovɪn])
Also mōfyn [ˡmovɪn]
wīn moyn ī chī sgryfennu llythyr at
Māri ngwraig I want you to write a
letter to my wife Margaret
(Other spellings: moin, foin, foyn, mofyn, fofyn, mofin,
fofin)
YMOFYN (literally: ask oneself) < (YM- reflexive
prefix) + soft mutation + (GOFYN = to ask). YMOFYN > MOFYN > MOYN (loss
of medial [v])
mūnad [ˡminad] (nf) minute. See MUNUD.
(= munud [ˡminɪd] (nf in the South, nm in North Wales)
minēti (GPC) [miˡnetɪ] (pl) minutes (= munudau
[miˡnedaɪ]
bōb mūnad every moment,
constantly
miwn
bothtu fīnad a
minute later (in about (a) minute)
(Other spellings or forms: munad, muned, muneti, funad,
funed, funeti, minad, finad, mineti, fineti)
mūnan [ˡminan] (pronoun) myself (= [fi] fy hun [ˡvi: və hi:n])
ī chī fel
mīnan lico mynd i-lan īr Star you like me are fond of going up to the Star (Inn)
mẁd [mʊd] (nm) mud (= llaid [ɬaɪd])
From English MUD
mwstro [ˡmʊstrɔ] (v) 1/ get a move on, bestir oneself (= ymysgwyd [əˡməsgʊɪd])
Mwstrwch dīcyn! Get a move on! Get a bit of a move on!
(MWSTR) + (-IO verbal sufix) > MWSTRIO > MWSTRO
mwstwr [ˡmʊstʊr] (nm) 1/ noise; (= sŵn [su:n]) 2/ commotion, uproar (= cynnwrf [ˡkənʊrv])
Dewch ch mwstwr,
boiz stop your
chatter, lads (leave your noise)
MWSTWR < MWSTR< rom Middle English MUSTER, if not
directly from Old French MOUSTRE (= troop of soldiers < show of strength,
exhibition) < the verb MOSTRER (= to show) < Latin MŌNSTRĀRE (=
to show), derived from the noun MŌNSTRUM (= a portent; also the origin of
the word MONSTER in English). In the sense of something shown, something
exhibited the word has passed into Dutch (MOUSIER) and German (MUSTER) meaning
sample, pattern.
mwyalch [ˡmuɪalx] (nf) blackbird (Turdus merula) (= mwyalch [ˡmuɪalx], mwyalchen [muɪˡalxɛn])
mwyalchod [muɪˡalxɔd] (pl) (= mwyalchod [muɪˡalxɔd])
Llwynyfwyalch place name, Llanilltud Faerdre (the) grove (of) the
blackbird, blackbird grove
GPC notes a variant molchan [ˡmɔlxan] (< mwyalchen) formerly in Morgannwg
mydda-nw [ˡməa nʊ] they say (= meddant hwy [ˡmeant huɪ])
mynni [ˡmənɪ] want, wish; demand, insist (= mynnu [ˡmənɪ])
gwētwch chī fynnoch chī
say what you will (= dywedwch
a fynnoch = say + that which + you
might say)
.....
Sumbolau:
a A / / e E / ɛ Ɛ / i I / o O / u U / w W / y Y /
MACRON: ā Ā / ǣ Ǣ / ē Ē / ɛ̄ Ɛ̄ / ī Ī / ō Ō / ū Ū / w̄ W̄ / ȳ Ȳ /
MACRON + ACEN DDYRCHAFEDIG: Ā̀
ā̀ , Ḗ ḗ, Ī́ ī́ , Ṓ ṓ ,
Ū́ ū́, (w), Ȳ́ ȳ́
MACRON + ACEN DDISGYNEDIG: Ǟ ǟ
, Ḕ ḕ, Ī̀ ī̀, Ṑ ṑ, Ū̀
ū̀, (w), Ȳ̀ ȳ̀
MACRON ISOD: A̱ a̱ , E̱ e̱ , I̱ i̱ , O̱ o̱,
U̱ u̱, (w), Y̱ y̱
BREF: ă Ă / ĕ Ĕ / ĭ Ĭ / ŏ
Ŏ / ŭ Ŭ / B5236: B5237:
BREF GWRTHDRO ISOD: i̯, u̯
CROMFACHAU: ⟨ ⟩ deiamwnt
ˡ ɑ ɑˑ aˑ a: / : / e eˑe: / ɛ ɛ: / ɪ
iˑ i: / ɔ oˑ o: / ʊ uˑ u: / ə / ʌ /
ẅ Ẅ / ẃ Ẃ / ẁ Ẁ / ŵ Ŵ /
ŷ Ŷ / ỳ Ỳ / / ɥ
ˡ ɬ ŋ ʃ ʧ θ ʒ ʤ / aɪ ɔɪ
əɪ uɪ ɪʊ aʊ ɛʊ əʊ /
ә ʌ ẃ
ă ĕ ĭ ŏ ŭ ẅ ẃ ẁ Ẁ
ŵ ŷ ỳ Ỳ
Hungarumlaut: A̋ a̋
U+1EA0 Ạ U+1EA1 ạ
U+1EB8 Ē U+1EB9 ē
U+1ECA Ị U+1ECB ị
U+1ECC Ọ U+1ECD ọ
U+1EE4 Ụ U+1EE5 ụ
U+1E88 Ẉ U+1E89 ẉ
U+1EF4 Ỵ U+1EF5 ỵ
ẹ ē
gyn aith
δ δ
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