wyt ti'n gallu siarad cymraeg? [are you able to speak Welsh?] (familiar / singular) ydych chi'n gallu siarad cymraeg? (polite / plural) ydych chi'n siarad cymraeg? [do you speak Welsh?] (literal translation) them three are formal. this is informal(not posh): tin siarad cymraeg?
You can say "Do you speak Welsh?" in Welsh by asking "Ydych chi'n siarad Cymraeg?"
(Wyt) ti'n siarad Cymraeg? (informal)Ydych chi'n siarad Cymraeg? (formal)
Not necessarily, many people think that Celtic and Gaelic are the same but they are not(hence the two different names). The cultures and languages are quite different and actually quite confusing if you know one and not the other. I am Welsh, I speak Cymraeg as my native tongue and have tried to understand Gaeilge but so much of it goes against everything I know in Cymraeg that I just get frustrated and give up. It's easier to go from English to Gaeilge or even from Latin to Gaeilge than it is from Cymraeg to Gaeilge.
The Welsh people Cymry; the language is Cymraeg; the adj. is Cymreig.
Thomas Gwynn Jones has written: 'Geiriadur Cymraeg-Saesneg a Saesneg-Cymraeg'
Cig eidion
Cymraeg
Cymraeg, also known as Welsh, is spoken in Wales. It is one of the official languages of the country alongside English.
Cymreig adj. (Cwn Defaid Cymreig = Welsh sheepdogs)Cymraeg adj. (of the Welsh language, Cwrs Cymraeg)Cymraeg noun (Welsh language)Cymry noun (the Welsh people)Cymreigaidd/Cymroaidd adj. ('Welshy')
Welsh (Cymraeg)
Cenin Cymraeg