[Welsh] Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Moderator:kevin

YngNghymru
Posts:1537
Joined:2009-05-21, 10:08
Location:Wrexham (Wrecsam)
Country:GBUnited Kingdom (United Kingdom)
[Welsh] Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby YngNghymru » 2009-12-23, 14:53

Cyflwyna adnoddau yr wyt ti wedi ffeindio ar y we yma.

Post resources that you've found on the internet here.
[flag]en[/flag] native| [flag]cy[/flag] mwy na chdi | [flag]fr[/flag] plus d'un petit peu| [flag]ar[/flag] ليتي استطعت

ég sef á sófanum!

YngNghymru
Posts:1537
Joined:2009-05-21, 10:08
Location:Wrexham (Wrecsam)
Country:GBUnited Kingdom (United Kingdom)

Re: Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby YngNghymru » 2009-12-23, 15:12

UniLang resources

The Unilang Basic Course (I'm such a self-promoting loser)

Conjugation of 'bod'

Conjugation of regular and irregular verbs

Courses etc

First and foremost:

Say Something in Welsh - This site is excellent, particularly if you're not someone who learns languages through visual methods. Although you won't learn how to write for a while, this course allows you to achieve oral ability really quickly. However, by using this link to get there, you sign an agreement that you'll still come back to UniLang. :P

the BBC site includes a dictionary, a reasonably solid basic grammar reference, a decent mutation checker and lots of games and other resources.

An online Welsh course, which is basic but will teach you comprehensive basic skills.

Dictionaries

The dictionary from said course

Y Geiriadur, my dictionary of choice :P

The BBC dictionary, as mentioned before.
[flag]en[/flag] native| [flag]cy[/flag] mwy na chdi | [flag]fr[/flag] plus d'un petit peu| [flag]ar[/flag] ليتي استطعت

ég sef á sófanum!

corcaighist
Posts:217
Joined:2007-05-30, 14:20
Location:Tallinn, Estonia
Country:EEEstonia (Eesti)
Contact:

Re: Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby corcaighist » 2010-03-19, 12:59

Native: [flag]en-IE[/flag] Upper-intermediate: [flag]ga[/flag] [flag]fr[/flag] Studying: [flag]et[/flag]
Dipping in and out: [flag]cy[/flag] [flag]lt[/flag] [flag]fi[/flag] [flag]gd[/flag] [flag]is[/flag]

YngNghymru
Posts:1537
Joined:2009-05-21, 10:08
Location:Wrexham (Wrecsam)
Country:GBUnited Kingdom (United Kingdom)

Re: Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby YngNghymru » 2010-06-04, 6:12

Dw i 'di sgwennu erthygl am 'Subordinate Clauses' yn Gymraeg.
[flag]en[/flag] native| [flag]cy[/flag] mwy na chdi | [flag]fr[/flag] plus d'un petit peu| [flag]ar[/flag] ليتي استطعت

ég sef á sófanum!

Quevenois
Posts:1260
Joined:2007-09-24, 21:27
Real Name:N. Le Stunff
Gender:male
Location:Breizh/Brittany/Bretagne

Re: Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby Quevenois » 2010-06-04, 18:13

Diddorol iawn. Dw i ddim yn gwybod byth bryd mae rhaid defnyddio mae, ydy neu sy(dd). Yn Llydaweg mae hi'n symlach i mi (wel, ond dw i ddim yn gwybod ydy hi'n syml i'r dysgwyr !!).
אַ שפראַך איז אַ דיאַלעקט מיט אַן אַרמײ און פֿלאָט

YngNghymru
Posts:1537
Joined:2009-05-21, 10:08
Location:Wrexham (Wrecsam)
Country:GBUnited Kingdom (United Kingdom)

Re: Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby YngNghymru » 2010-06-04, 18:28

Wel, tydy hi ddim yn reit gomplecs:

Mae 'sy' yn cael ei ddefnyddio ar ôl 'a' (ac gan fod ffocws yn gweithio fel clawsiaid relatyf, pan mae rhan o'r brawddeg yn dod i'r pen i'w phwysleisio hi).

Mae 'ydy' yn cael ei ddefnyddio yn y presennol efo cwestiynau ac, hefyd, efo'r negyddol pan mae'r negyddol yn dod ar ôl particl efo 'd':

'Ydy hi'n dod?'
'Mae hi'n gwybod nad ydy hi'n dod'

Hefyd, yn brawddegau sy'n dangos BE YDY RHYWBETH, er esiampl 'be ydy rhywbeth', 'Cymraes ydy hi', 'cyfreithwyr ydy'r ddau', mae ydy yn cael ei ddefnyddio.

'Nola, mae 'mae' yn cael ei ddefnyddio yn y presennol, mewn claws sy'n sefyll ar ei ben ei hun. :)
[flag]en[/flag] native| [flag]cy[/flag] mwy na chdi | [flag]fr[/flag] plus d'un petit peu| [flag]ar[/flag] ليتي استطعت

ég sef á sófanum!

eryrwyn
Posts:9
Joined:2012-06-26, 18:07
Gender:male
Location:Poznań
Country:PLPoland (Polska)

Re: [Welsh] Edau adnoddau/Resources thread

Postby eryrwyn » 2012-06-26, 18:42

Geiriadur yr Academi (Yn anffodus, dim ond Saesneg-Cymraeg)
[flag]pl[/flag][flag]en[/flag][flag]fr[/flag][flag]cy[/flag][flag]ir[/flag]


Return to “Celtic Languages”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests