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AmeriCymru Welsh Directory
Three Reasons to Add Your Business/Society Listing to our Directory
- The listings are all integrated with the DisQus commenting system which means that they are also integrated with Facebook/Twitter etc. You can circulate your listing via social networking channels, encourage others to do so AND use it to make announcements , special promotions etc.
- The Directory can be a useful part of your linking strategy. As the site grows we are sure that it will become more highly ranked, consequently a link from the Directory will help increase your visibility in search results. You can add more than one link in the 'Long Description' field.
- Most Directories do not generate a large amount of traffic. We intend that the AmeriCymru Directory will be different. It IS the Directory of a community and as such we will be driving traffic to it. It is intended that the Directory will serve as the focus for special promotions , competitions etc both on the AmeriCymru network and on other social sites.
There are two options:-
Without Login: You may post your listing without registering or logging into the site. If you adopt this method you will NOT subsequently be able to edit your listing. Use this method if you think that you will not need to alter or amend your listing at a later date. Simply click on Add Entry
With Login/Registration: Use this option if you think you may wish to alter your listing in the future. Requires username/password and email address. Simply click on Login
Here are some example pages:-
St David's Society of Greater St Louis
ADD YOUR LISTING NOW!
We will be using early adopters listings on various sites as example posts. SO sign up now to get free extra exposure for your business/site or society. Add Entry or Login
Cofion gorau
The AmeriCymru Team
A message from Sian Ifans:-
IF You wish to see the A470 Named 'Main Road Prince Owain Glyndwr, sign the petition in the link canlynol and please pass on to one and all.
http://www.gopetition.com/ Petitions / campaign-to-the-name-A470-wales -Main-road-prince-ow.html
Blodwen's New Year Sale - 50% Reduction on Selected Items.
On Twelfth Night in Wales, groups of men would go out 'Hunting the Wren' - a custom which entailed capturing a tiny bird in a cage and carrying it from door to door asking householders to pay for the privilege of peeping at the animal. This was to signify that in the days surrounding the shortest day, pagans believed the natural order could be turned on its head - the wren symbolising the smallest most insignificant creature becoming the most important animal - paraded around for everyone to see.
This practice was accompanied by 'Wassailing' where funny shaped bowls full of spiced beer were, again taken from house to house and toasts raised for bumper harvests in the coming year.
Another weird custom was that of the 'Mari Lwyd' where a horse's skull was decorated with ribbons and carried around challenging householders to a battle of rhyming insults!
Blodwen - Bringing thecraftman's way of life to your way of living
"A new band we love. Bloody lush!" - Lauren Laverne, BBC 6music
"Life-affirming, well worth a listen, it'll put a spring in your step" - The Independent
STORM CASTLE, RELEASE SHARKS, FREE MUSIC
Diligently polishing a new album due out in spring, Welsh-Anglo-American psych-punk-alt-rockers Howl Griff invite you to a headline Camden gig, tell you about the new single, and offer you a free MP3.
STORM THE CASTLE...
On Thursday 12th January Howl Griff headline at Camden's legendary Dublin Castle http://thedublincastle.com/ Ably supported by Little Shadows, The Harlots and Deaf Offenders, HG will be unveiling their killer new single 'Sharkfins In The Sky' , released later this month but exclusively available on the night.
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/148914
...RELEASE THE SHARKS...
Released on Monday 30th January but available to pre-order now, 'Sharkfins In The Sky' combines thoughtful lyrics with irresistibly uplifting melodic invention. The story of a shooting at an ice-rink disco is soundtracked by a breathlessly catchy new wave / disco crossover, and it's fast becoming one of the band's most popular songs.
"Cleverer than a fox and twice as tuney" - Adam Walton, BBC Radio Wales
More info: http://howlgriff.com/music/sharkfins.html
...FREE THE MUSIC
Every month Howl Griff give away a new song , downloadable from http://www.howlgriff.com/freemp3s.html . This month it's another longstanding live favourite: Countdown to Zero, a shuffling smorgasbord of psychedelia building into a heartfelt finale.
See the same page for access to much more free music, while Howl Griff's much-admired back catalogue is now available via Bandcamp http://howlgriff.bandcamp.com/ on a pay-as-you-please basis.
That's it for now, more next month. See you in Camden, or in what The Kids no longer call cyberspace...
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HOWL GRIFF
Website: http://www.HowlGriff.com
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/HowlGriff
Twitter: http://twitter.com/HowlGriff
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/HowlGriffBand
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/HowlGriff
Bandcamp (downloads): http://howlgriff.bandcamp.com/
Merchandise: http://howlgriffshop.spreadshirt.net
We are: Hywel Griffiths, Nick Moore,
Gary Parkinson, Steve Kennedy and you
I've got to translate about 5,000 words from English to Welsh as part of an MA assignment. If you have something suitable that needs translating, I'm willing to do it free of charge as I prefer to spend my time on something that will be read by people other than just my assessors.
Clearly, books are out of the question, but essays, articles, brochures, guides, manuals, and so on are more likely to be about the right length. However, it doesnt have to be a single piece, so even if you've got something shorter, I may still consider it if I also have another proposed piece that would make up the word count..
I intend to begin the work around the middle of February and hope to then have it completed in around three or four weeks.
I'm living in South Korea at the moment, so finding something appropriate is not easy and I would appreciate any suggestions you have, even if it is not something of your own.
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Mae'n rhaid i mi gyfieithu tua 5,000 o eiriau o Saesneg i Gymraeg fel rhan o aseiniad cwrs MA. Os oes gennych rywbeth addas sydd angen ei gyfieithu, rwy'n fodlon ei gwneud yn rhad ac am ddim gan fod yn well gennyf dreulio fy amser ar rywbeth caiff ei ddarllen gan bobl heblaw dim ond fy aseswyr.
Yn amlwg, mae llyfr allan o'r cwestiwn, ond byddai traethawd, erthygl, llyfryn, llawlyfr, neu rywbeth tebyg yn fwy tebygol o fod tua'r hyd iawn. Fodd bynnag, does dim rhaid iddo fod yn un darn, felly hyd yn oed os oes gennych rywbeth byrrach, gallaf dal ei gysidro os ydw i hefyd yn derbyn darn arall y gall godi cyfanswm y geiriau i'r nifer derbyniol.
Bwriadaf ddechrau'r gwaith tua chanol mis Chwefror ac yna gobeithiaf ei gwblhau mewn tua thair neu pedair wythnos.
Rwy'n byw yn Ne Corea ar y pryd, felly dydy ddim yn rhwydd dod o hyd i rywbeth addas ac fe werthfawrogaf unrhyw gynigion sydd gennych, hyd yn oed os nad ydy'n rhywbeth gennych chi eich hun.
can anyone help me please, i am doing a project for my textiles degree , the project is about welsh migration and i want to look for real stories of real people who migrated, the reasons why and where from and to. im lookin for names dates which ships they traveled on and perhaps letters or poetry. also anything about quiltmaking and the influence the welsh had on the americans quiltmaking traditions. I have a few ideas for my final quilt but need to do lots of research first, i would be very grateful for any help thank you so much
hazel reitz
Well, surely one is or one isnt! Its actually far more complicated than that. Being Welsh isnt a simple matter of your parents nationality, the location of your birth, or even where you live at present. Indeed, many nations of the world give the opportunity for citizens of another country to become naturalised citizens of their land and adopt a new nationality - once they go through a considerable number of hoops.
My passport confirms I am a citizen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. As an aside, I have discovered that since 1983 I am no longer a British subject but a British citizen . Concealed in all that complexity is that fact that qualifying people in Wales, England, Scotland and Northern Ireland all have the status of British citizen and there is no mechanism to become a naturalised citizen of just one of those three nations or one province. This is all beginning to get very complicated and I recommend you take five minutes out to watch The United Kingdom Explained . Its a fun piece but beware of some inaccuracies such as Anglesey, the Isle of Wight and the Scottish islands NOT being part of Great Britain and England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland being sovereign nations with their own Parliaments. Ah, that it were so!
Anyway, I digress. This is all about me being Welsh. Was I born in Wales? No, sadly. I entered this world six weeks after the creation of the National Health Service (Architect: Aneurin Bevan a Welshman) so I was free at the point of delivery which was Battle Hospital, Reading. My father? Born in London to English parents (with Irish and French one generation earlier). My mother, however, was born in Cilfynydd, a coal-mining community in the Rhondda Valley, to proud Welsh parents with many generations of North and South Welsh ancestry.
I loved our visits to South Wales as children and our times with our Welsh family and in the 1980s and early 90s I always felt at home when I travelled in Wales in my role of Wales Liaison Manager for the British Tourist Authority. The tipping point came when our elder son Mark moved to Llanberis in 2002. We visited regularly and both fell in love with North Wales and moved here in January 2007.
I realised almost immediately that for the first time in my life, I felt as if Id truly come home. Some people scoff at the Welsh concept of hiraeth a deep sense of longing for, and connectedness with, the land of Wales to its people and to its history. Hiraeth is probably the most tangible and real explanation I can give for my Welshness as its nothing to do with the more conventional Welsh icons. Its only slightly connected with rugby thats only been the national sport since December 1905 ; it certainly has nothing to do with thick woollen shawls and silly tall hats an invention of Lady Llanover in the 1830s; daffodils only became a Welsh emblem in 1911 courtesy of David Lloyd-George, and the Welsh flag was officially recognised in 1959!
No, Im a Welshman because I know I am. I cry when I sing Calon L n or Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau . Im profoundly moved when I hear Katherine Jenkins, Bryn Terfel or Cerys Matthews. I am joyously transported 1400 years into Celtic history when I sit in Penmon Priory and think of St Seriol and St Cybi in their daily meeting at Llanerchymedd after a 20 mile walk. I long for their connectedness with God and with the land.
Its all summed up in a line from our National Anthem (also found on the edge of Welsh 1 coins) - Pleidiol wyf i'm gwlad - True am I to my country.
Dw i 'n Gymro balch.
Can anyone recommend a good reliable source for Love Spoons?Les Jenkins