Linkin up - yn papurau newydd!
General Discussions ( Anything Goes )
Hi Rhian
If you visit Portland, OR on your travels be sure to let us know. Happy to chat for an hour over a cuppa or a beer.
Cofion
Ceri/Gaabi
Hi Rhian
If you visit Portland, OR on your travels be sure to let us know. Happy to chat for an hour over a cuppa or a beer.
Cofion
Ceri/Gaabi
Great idea Steve Diolch for posting....will circulate.
Sounds like a great project ....please email me at americymru@gmail.com to let us know if there is anything more we can do to help.
Diolch for posting John....will add some observations when I have had time to digest
Gwych....the massacre of the Anglo Saxon tongue proceeds apace
I must disagree....admittedly the silent 't' is a Kairdiff phenomenon BUT I have heard same in Swansea, Aberdare, Merthyr and up the Rhondda SO I contend that the dictionary is behind the times. Wenglish has moved on
Now that I recall...when I was a student teacher in Swansea all my students pronounced inni without the t. Thus demonstrating their grasp of euphony and audial ( ordeal? ) aesthetics
There is no such word as 'innit' in the Wenglish language. The correct spelling is inni ...and u knows it
This topic has come up before on the site and I think the general concensus was that whilst Rosetta was ok you'd get more 'bang for your buck' from the various online resources, some of which Peter has listed below. Whatever you decide, best of luck with your resolution
Did you ever fill the vacancy at the Cerrigydrudion Small Hadron Collider Facility? http://www.welshspaceagency.org/