The Welsh language emerged in the 6th century and is still in use.
Another answer:Currently over 20% say they can speak Welsh. Perhaps 12 per cent are fluent.Around 21.7% of the population
Yes, Welsh was spoken in England. Welsh is a very old language, and at the time the earliest examples we have were written, parts of what is now England were entirely Welsh. In fact there are Welsh communities, in which people speak Welsh, today.
Owain Glyndwr's native language was Welsh, but as a member of the Welsh nobility he had been well-educated and was multi-lingual, also speaking English, French and Latin.
The Welsh are the people (and language) of Wales, the country in central western Great Britain. Wales is a constituent country of the United Kingdom.
It's not legal to shoot anyone with anything in England. Even if they do speak funny.
Another answer:Currently over 20% say they can speak Welsh. Perhaps 12 per cent are fluent.Around 21.7% of the population
welsh i think
1.5 million
Yes there are areas of the US that still have some that speak welsh. There were / are some Indian tribes that also spoke the language following the Welsh arriving on the US shores.
What language do Welsh people speak? English or (in the case of nearly a quarter of the population of Wales) Welsh.
The everyday language is English. Many people also speak at least a little Welsh.
For the same reason that some Welsh people speak Welsh. Gaelic is the traditional language of Scotland so many people continue to speak it as they feel it is an intrinsic part of their cultural heritage.
Yes. The vast majority of Welsh speakers are in Wales, while a larger number of people inside and outside France speak French. Around three-quarters of a million people speak Welsh; just over one hundred times that number speak French naturally and another 220 million as their second language.
Katherine Jenkins can speak welsh
Welsh is a regional language, spoken by a minority of people, living mainly in Wales (the UK).
The vast majority speak English but they also speak irish welsh and a type of scottish
200,000