I understand 'plas mawr' to mean big hall or big mansion, in other words a big house. I only twigged onto this when I heard that 'ty mawr' was the Welsh for big house which is very close to the Irish for big house 'tigh mór'. Depending on the dialect of Irish spoken you might pronounce 'tigh' the same as 'ty' and 'mawr' is not far from the pronunciation of 'mór'.
ptkcollins
"Mawr" is a Welsh word that translates to "big" or "large" in English.
Big, great, large
'Pamela' has no meaning in Welsh; it is an English name.
It's not a Spanish word so it's doesn't have a meaning in Spanish. Trevor is an English surname from the Welsh place name trefor, meaning "big village".[tref ("village") + mawr ("big", "great")]
"Bryn Mawr" is Welsh for "big hill," reflecting the college's location on a hill in Pennsylvania.
It's not Spanish, it's Welsh. It means "much love to you".
cop/copyn The question should be phrased "What is the Welsh word for spider?" "Spider" is an English word and therefore has no meaning in Welsh.
'Celtic brothers' is in English and has no meaning in Welsh.To say 'Celtic brothers' in Welsh is brodyr Celtaidd.
Much love/ big love
It translates literally from Welsh (Cymraeg) as "little brother", brawd meaning brother, and bach meaning little. Welsh, as in languages such as French, Spanish (and unlike English) follows the noun with the adjective, which would be considered by an English speaker to be inverted.
It doesn't mean anything in Welsh; it's in English.
'Sorry' isn't a Welsh word so it has no meaning in Welsh.