Two hearts, one love. Aww.
dau ddeg dau ddeg un dau ddeg dau dau ddeg tri dau ddeg pedwar dau ddeg pump dau ddeg chwech dau ddeg saith dau ddeg wyth dau ddeg naw tri deg
(Masc. / Fem. ) Un Dau / Dwy Tri / Tair Pedwar / Pedair Pump Chwech Saith Wyth Naw Deg Un-deg-un / Unarddeg Un-deg-dau / Deuddeg
1-UN............een as in screen 11-UN DEG UN 2-DAU .........die 12-UN DEG DAU 3-TRI............tree 13-UN DEG TRI 4-PEDWAR...ped-wharr 14-UN DEG PEDWAR 5-PUMP........pimp 15-UN DEG PUMP 6-CHWECH..ch-wear-ch 16-UN DEG CHWECH 7-SAITH.......sithe 17-UN DEG SAITH 8-WYTH.......oi-th 18-UN DEG WYTH 9-NAW.........now 19-UN DEG NAW 10-DEG........deg like peg 20- DAU DDEG 21-DAU DDEG UN .......2 TEN 1 welsh numbers after 10 are said in tens then unit form....so 72 would be saith(7) deg(10) dau(2)......
O un i ddau ddeg dau.
Chris Ellis has written: 'Un, dau, tri'
You would say "Rwy'n ddeuddeg oed" in Welsh to mean "I am twelve."
Un - one (een) Dau - two tree - three pedwar - four pimp - five chwech - six saith - seven wyth - eight naw - nine deg - ten To say eleven you say " Un deg un" which really means 1 ten and 1 =11 Un deg dau ..... Un deg tree, and so forth
The cast of Pour un temps - 2004 includes: Damian Kell as The Brother Cariad Lloyd as The Sister Alex Mayover as Friend
One sausage = Un selsigen Two sausages = Dau selsigen Sausages = Selsig Sausage = Selsigen (in welsh, if a number proceeds a noun the noun is always mentioned as if it was singular, if no number proceeds a noun the noun is mentioned plurally. e.g. Dau selsigen = 2 * 1 sausage. Un selsigen = 1 * 1 sausage.
The numbers between 1 and 10 are as follows: un=1 dau=2 tri= 3 pedwar=4 pump=5 chwech=6 saith=7 wyth=8 naw=9 deg=10 Following the number ten, the numbers continue in this manner: un deg un = 11 un deg dau = 12 ... un deg naw = 19 dau deg = 20 The multiples of ten continue in this manner: 30 = tri deg 40 = pedwar deg 50 = pum deg 60 = chwe deg 70 = saith deg 80 = wyth deg 90 = naw deg 100 = cant Take note of the numbers for 50 and 60 - most commonly, the numbers are written "pum deg" and "chwe deg" rather than "pump" and "chwech" respectively.
The Welsh numbers from 1-10 are Un (one - pronounced "een") Dau (two - pronounced "die") Tri (three - pronounced "tree") Pedwar (four - pronounced "ped-whar") Pump (five - pronounced "pimp") Chwech (six - pronounced kwe-ch) Saith (seven - prounounced "scythe") Wyth (eight - pronounced "oi-th") Nawr (nine - pronounced "naw-r") Deg (ten - pronounced "deg") 10+ are Un deg (ten - pronounced "een deg") Un deg un (eleven - prononced "een deg een") Un deg dau (twelve - pronounced "een deg die") And so on. 20+ is Dau deg un (twenty - pronounced "die deg un") I'm sure using this, you can work out everything up to 99. One hundred is cant (pronounced can't) For 100-999 you use things such as un cant saith deg pedwar (which is 174 - "een can't scythe deg ped-whar") For reference, a thousand is mil - pronounced "meel".
I hope you mean 'What do the initials 'UN' mean - United Nations.