Problem
I can see bilingual signs in Welsh and English. That would be a really quick way to learn a few Welsh words whilst I am hanging around on a station, changing trains, or going on holiday or coming home. I can see how the whole sentence translates. But that is hard to remember. What do the individual words mean?
Answers
I can see bilingual signs in Welsh and English. That would be a really quick way to learn a few Welsh words whilst I am hanging around on a station, changing trains, or going on holiday or coming home. I can see how the whole sentence translates. But that is hard to remember. What do the individual words mean?
Answers
Photos by Angela Lansbury. Copyright. I cropped this bilingual sign from a larger photo.
You can probably work out some of the words just by looking at the translation and the similar consonants and vowels.
Welsh - English
dim - no
d r y s a u - doors
p o l i s i - policy (the letters p o l i start both words)
s e d d i - seating (both words start with s and e. T and D sound similar.)
t r e n - train (the letters t r and n are the same in both words)
y - the
y s m y g u - smoking (drop the y and you can read s and m)
English - Welsh
doors - d r y s a u (d and r are common to both words)
no - dim
policy - p o l i s i
seating - s e d d i
smoking - y s m y g u
the - y
train - t r e n
Travel tips
You can do painting and writing holidays in Fishguard in summer, autumn and spring.
(Courses include: entering and running competitions, crime writing, humour, poetry, romance, novel writing, short stories. )
www.writersholiday.net
Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. Teacher of English and languages. I have many other posts travelling and languages in Wales, Europe, Asia, the Americas and worldwide. Please follow, bookmark and share your favourite posts.
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