Welsh/Mynediad/Lesson 1

< Welsh < Mynediad

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

Dialogue

Welsh Conversation • Lesson 1 • audio (upload)
Gwers 1 Lesson 1
Glyn Helo. Pwy dach chi?
Catrin Catrin ydw i. Beth ydy'ch enw chi?
Glyn Glyn ydw i. Sut dach chi?
Catrin Iawn, diolch. A chi?
Glyn Da iawn. Beth ydy'ch gwaith chi?
Catrin Athrawes ydw i.
Glyn A, meddyg ydw i.

Vocabulary

Welsh Vocabulary • Lesson 1 • audio (upload)
Gwers 1 Lesson 1
Cymraeg English
Helo Hello
Pwy Who
Chi You (formal)
A/ac And
Sut How
Da Good
Iawn Fine; Very
Beth What
Eich Your (formal)
Enw Name
Gwaith / Swydd Job
Athrawes Teacher (female)
Meddyg Doctor

Introducing oneself

In the dialogue, Glyn asks Catrin,

This is one way of asking who someone is. Another way is to ask for their name. Catrin asks,

To respond, we can use the ydw i pattern. Just respond,

This will literally translate to '[name] am I', as the word order is slightly different than what you would say in English. In this sentence, (y)dw is the form of 'to be' and i means 'I' or 'me'. For right now, just learn these phrases parrot fashion until we deconstruct them in later lessons.

Another way to say who you are is,

Fy enw i ydy... translates to 'My name is...' As with all the other phrases on this page, just learn how to say it for now, before we deconstruct it in later lessons.

How are you?

In the dialogue, we hear Sut dach chi? which means 'How are you?'. There are several possible ways to answer this question:

Cymraeg English
Bendigedig Fantastic
Da iawn Very good
Da Good
Iawn Fine
Dim yn ddrwg Not bad
Ofnadwy Awful

If you notice, the word iawn follows da (good) to make 'very good'. Iawn by itself can mean 'fine', but after an adjective it can mean 'very'.

What do you do?

To ask what someone's job is, you can use the phrase,

which means, 'What is your job?' You can respond using the dw i (am I) pattern from earlier. Insert the job title before dw i.

Here are some more occupations you can use:

Cymraeg English
Actor Actor
Actores Actress
Ysgrifennydd Secretary (m)
Ysgrifenyddes Secretary (f)
Ffermwr Farmer
Cyfreithiwr Lawyer

Note that in Welsh, there is no indefinite article (a, an). For example, in English, one would say:

But in Welsh, there is no indefinite article. So meddyg means both 'doctor' and 'a doctor'. Instead, just use the word as it is:

Review

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