plentyn. By Chloe, bffls with Emily
16. You should be proud to be Welsh and learn your own language!
In Welsh, children typically refer to their grandparents as Nain ("grandmother") and Taid ("grandfather").
The question is not very clear, but in the past there would have been some areas of Wales where English was used and some where Welsh was used. In the 19th century, the government introduced the "Welsh Not", a cord which was hung round the neck of any child heard speaking Welsh. The child wearing it at the end of the day would be beaten, so within a few years, English was the only language in Welsh schools. According to Wikipedia, the Welsh Not declined after 1888, but I personally met a woman in her 60s or 70s who cried as she said it had been used in her school, presumably well into the 20th Century.
Welsh poet Dylan Thomas wrote A Child's Christmas in Wales, and recorded it in 1952. This poem is one of his most popular pieces.
It can mean a kilt, a child's smock, surcoat, petticoat. A south Wales variant.
I know for a fact that people in Wales are called Welsh.
You can say "I am Welsh" by simply stating "I am Welsh" in English. In Welsh, you would say "Cymraeg ydw i" (I am Welsh).
Welsh dragon in Welsh is "draig Goch".
Thomas Welsh was not the inventor of the skateboard. He was simply a man who saw that there was no patent and wanted to capitalize on that fact, so he applied for the patent. Going back as far as 1962, there was a patent for a "child's coaster" by A.C. Boyden.
The Welsh word for "Welsh" is Cymraeg :)
'gyda dy Gymraeg di' is 'with your Welsh'