Born in Wales (as a label or heading)
is
Ganwyd yng Nghymru
in Welsh.
Note, however, that the phrase
I was born in Wales
is
Cefais fy ngeni yng Nghymru
Alternative forms:
Ces i fy ngeni yng Nghymru
Mi ges i fy ngeni yng Nghymru
Christian Bale was born in Wales but considers himself English. Timothy Dalton was born in Wales and also says the same. Tom Jones is 25% Welsh ancestry and considers himself Welsh.
Welsh and British
Welsh
Welsh people are born in the country of Wales which is part of the United Kingdom (UK). Click on the link below for more information on Wales
That would be a personal choice as you could use either as your nationality. A Welsh nationalist is likely to choose Welsh while a non Welsh speaker who is a supporter of the United Kingdom might choose British.
This is an interesting question. I don't think there were any full blood Welsh born prince of Wales because Wales was never fully united unless it was under someone who revolted against the English or tried to conquer all of Wales. But the current Queen of England is part Welsh. She is descended from a Welsh ruler named Rhys ap Gruffudd as were all the English rulers since the Tudors. If you look at it that way, the last Welsh born Prince of Wales is her son, Charles.
I know for a fact that people in Wales are called Welsh.
Geni yng Nghymru, Marw yng Nghymru!
Llanelli is a town in Wales
Yes, Welsh is a noun. It refers to the native language of Wales or to the people of Wales, who are known as the Welsh.
My translator says it is Welsh for "Wales about forever". It actually means Wales For Ever Although the above 2 are correct - they are the 'literal' translations, in welsh we speak the words in a different order to those in English - the actual meaning of 'Cymru am byth' is God Bless Wales - Cymru being the welsh word for Wales!
Wales. Wales is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. Nationals are Welsh the language is Welsh