In Llanrumney, there are six primary schools:
Bryn Hafod, Pen-y-Bryn, Glan-yr-Afon, St Cadoc's, St Mellon's and Bro Eirwg.
There is only one secondary school - Llanrumney High School (which is not a Welsh speaking school).
Bro Eirwg is the only school in the area that teaches Welsh as the first language.
Hope I helped! ♥
It doesn't mean anything in Welsh; it's in English.
The name Jordan is Hebrew in origin and it means to flow down. There is not a Welsh meaning for this name.
De Nada is Spanish, not Welsh. It means "you're welcome" or "it's nothing".
Merry Christmas in welsh!
daughter
The population of Llanrumney is 11,295.
Llanrumney High School was created in 195#.
The motto of Llanrumney High School is 'Educating for life'.
I can't say about other Celtic languages, but Welsh, I would say, is getting stronger. Since the 80s the Welsh Language is being learned at schools. Don't forget that at one time English law prevented Welsh being spoken at schools and if you spoke Welsh you had to wear a small wooden plank and the one got to wear it last of the school day got beaten by a cane. Some jobs are advertised in Welsh to increase the Welsh-speaking work force.
No one has to speak welsh. Some choose to and others chose not to i guess. My mother was brought up with welsh as her first language , my father was brought up through English and it was my mother who taught him to speak welsh. He probably speaks welsh more than he does English these days... so i was brought up through welsh (i live in south wales... although the north has more welsh speakers than the south - there are pleeeeeenty of people that live their lives through welsh in the south too) A lot of children attending my school have parents who don't speak welsh , however i know there are families who wish to send their children to private schools and so have to send them to English schools. so really... there's a variety. Some speaking no English , some speaking no welsh , some having the ability to speak welsh but chosing to live their lives through English etcetc...
The WELSH NOT was a piece of wood with WN or WELSH NOT on it and a piece of string to hang around the neck of someone that you heard talking Welsh in your School and whoever had the WELSH NOT around their neck at the end of the day was punished by a caniong. I just want to know when it was enforced in Welsh Schools that is all.
Yes, Welsh can be taught in English schools. In fact, it is a statutory requirement for all maintained schools in Wales to provide Welsh language education. This means that Welsh is taught as a second language in English-medium schools to ensure that all students have the opportunity to learn and use the language.
What a marvellous question! Speaking as eloquently as you do, you really must be a poet. 'What is the Welsh for?' I will certainly attempt to answer you best I can... The Welsh are to admire, you ignorant swine.
There isn't any specific regions in Wales where there are Welsh speakers as there are Welsh speakers all over Wales.
Nothing. But if they spoke in Welsh they were punished.
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.
It is a Brythonic Celtic language spoken as the mother tongue in parts of Wales and taught in all Welsh schools.