Cae, maes.
"You are Welsh" = Rwyt ti'n Gymreig
Draig Gymreig
No in Welsh is dim.
Ton = WaveGwyn = WhiteLlais = VoiceWave White Voice! :)---- The Answer Above is Also CorrectBut there are a few Welsh words which have a different meaning depending on which area they are used in. (Many languages don't have a single standard form: Welsh, Czech, Catalan, Yoruba - and many others - manage without one).Tongwynlais is in the Lower Tâf valley, and in the lower Tâf valley ton has the meaning of field (the usual Welsh word for this is tondir - and if you are a farmer, the precise translation is layland).Also in the Lower Tâf valley Gwynlais is a Man's name.So Tongwynlais probably means Mr. Gwynlais' field.(If you look at a map you will see that the next village along is Pantgwynlais :: Mr. Gwynlais' Other Field).
The welsh for slow is ARAF
Welsh Field Archery Association was created in 1970.
The welsh word for park is 'PARC'. parc (park, field) cae (field) coetgae (enclosure)
Field
blue field
Jimmy Welsh debuted on April 14, 1925, playing for the Boston Braves at Braves Field; he played his final game on September 28, 1930, playing for the Boston Braves at Braves Field.
The cast of Somewhere on the Battle Field - 1916 includes: Hobart Henley Claire McDowell William Welsh
Traditionally at the Battle of Heathfield [633] a Welsh army picked leeks from a field and wore them as a badge to distinguish themselves from their Saxon adversaries. The ordinary word for Leek and the ordinary word for Daffodil are the same in Welsh. So perhaps it was Daffodils - which look prettier.
I know for a fact that people in Wales are called Welsh.
"You are Welsh" = Rwyt ti'n Gymreig
Draig Gymreig
'gyda dy Gymraeg di' is 'with your Welsh'
No in Welsh is dim.