De Nada is Spanish, not Welsh. It means "you're welcome" or "it's nothing".
Llan is a Welsh word. It means 'church' or 'village'. The plural is llanau."Llana' could be a Spanish surname.
My friends speak Spanish and Welsh.
Err...Welsh!
You say, "la gente galés."
Kendall isn't spanish. It's Old English/Welsh for River Kent Valley.
Huw Edwards speaks French and Spanish more fluently than English or Welsh.
It's not Spanish, it's Welsh. It means "much love to you".
Spanish, German, English, Welsh, Teulche, Guarani, Yagani, Ona.
This generally means "Welsh-speaking Wales" -- a reference to those areas of the country where the Welsh language is commonly spoken, although sometimes people say "Welsh Wales" when they simply mean those parts of the country which look and feel "very Welsh".It's a translation of the Welsh phrase Cymru Cymraeg. But note that Welsh has two words for "Welsh".Cymraeg means Welsh by language (Welsh-speaking, written in Welsh, etc.).Cymreig means Welsh by nature (Welsh-born or descended, made in Wales, etc.)Thus:-- llyfr Cymraeg : a Welsh book (i.e. a book in Welsh)-- caws Cymreig : Welsh cheese (because cheese cannot speak any language!)
There is no record of William Hague being fluent in any language other than English which he speaks with a Yorkshire accent. However, his Welsh born wife taught him how to sing the Welsh national anthem in Welsh.
Ethnicity:*62.5% Welsh*25% Irish*12.5% English