I'm gonna go out on a limb and say Whales.
The anglo-saxon root SWER means "to swear" or "to promise solemnly." It is related to words such as "swear," "sworn," and "swore."
Welsh is an easy language to learn, well, it is for a Welsh person like me. If you can't say Cymraeg (which is welsh in welsh), then you obviously can't say Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantyseiliogogogoch.So baisically it's hard for some!
Some Welsh words for 'wig' aregwallt gosogperwigwig
achos There are two words. 1. Achos 2. Oherwydd
One example of a Welsh and French word that are similar is "abertawe" in Welsh and "Aberdeen" in French, both meaning "mouth of the river". Another example is "bws" in Welsh and "bus" in French, both meaning "bus".
The anglo-saxon root SWER means "to swear" or "to promise solemnly." It is related to words such as "swear," "sworn," and "swore."
Welsh isn't really that hard to learn.=I suppose it's easier if you are young or have a welsh family, otherwise no it's not hard you might get a few learning difficulties but otherwise NO!=
The root swer was used to mean "swear" or "proclaim".
offeiriades (priestess)
Teisen or cacen are the Welsh words for 'a cake'.
Welsh is an easy language to learn, well, it is for a Welsh person like me. If you can't say Cymraeg (which is welsh in welsh), then you obviously can't say Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantyseiliogogogoch.So baisically it's hard for some!
It is Sbaengi Hela Cymreig
There are 2 syllables. An-swer.
What is the answer to a divdion problem
Some Welsh words for 'wig' aregwallt gosogperwigwig
Mae'n anhygoel i ddysgu
There are a lot of words you can't say in Standard English. Welsh words are a good example. e.g gwydd, llwyd, ydych, andLlanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrob wllllantysiliogogogoch. (There shouldn't be a space in this word, but Wiki couldn't cope with a word with 58 letters!)And how would you ask questions such as "Ydy Gwen yn mynd?"Not forgetting, of course, that well known saying 'Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon!'THE PROBLEM IS that the standard English pronunciation of letters in English words is quite different from the way that letters/words are pronounced in Welsh words. How should a 'w', or 'll', or 'words without vowels' be pronounced in a sentence consisting of Welsh words?IT IS POSSIBLE to provide phonetic equivalents that might help an English person, but some Welsh sounds are unique to Welsh words and there are no corresponding sounds in standard English that can be used as examples!Of course, one could learn to speak Welsh, but that isn't standard English, it's Welsh!