I want to be a Welsh speaker to help my son who will join a Welsh medium school in September!
I want to be a Welsh speaker because I live in a Welsh speaking community; the village school that my children attend is Welsh speaking and the voluntary group iām involved is made up predominantly of Welsh speakers; it makes me feel embarrassed that they have to switch to English when weāre having a group meeting. My hope is that I will be able to chat with friends and neighbours, teachers and colleagues, as well as my own children. Iāve lived in and around Aberystwyth for 17 years, itās my home, I love it, but I know that to many people Iām still an outsider; I hope that speaking Welsh will help with feeling more involved or accepted in the community. Most people here are lovely, by the way, and my local shop keeper was very pleased that I said āiāve forgotten somethingā in Welsh when I got to the till - she said she will help me to practice and that I am not allowed to speak English in the shop now! haha!
I want to be Welsh speaker because I want to converse with the people I work and live with in their own language. Plus Iāve always wanted to be able to speak another language and now I have the real opportunity to do it properly and immerse myself in it. One thing I hope will happen is that those people I live and work with will feel confident enough in my abilities to speak to me in Welshā¦
I want to be a Welsh speaker because it is used a lot in my workplace. Iād like to be able to use it with my students and colleagues naturally (instead of just learning a few rote statements to keep the external assessors happy )
I want to be a Welsh speaker because both of my girls will be going to a Welsh medium school. I donāt want to have two teenage daughters who speak (and give cheek) in a language I canāt understand!!
Ahā¦you laugh now, but either your Cymraeg trajectory shall rocket, or your diet is possibly at risk of becoming bara, dwr a menyn (if you donāt get flustered and ask for something like bolltau)
Iām ok on the important basics of food - I know āgwinā and ācawsā, so Iāll be alright. haha!
My grandmother was a Welsh speaker but was forced to speak only English at age 5 as her family moved across the border. She lost most of her Welsh over the yearsā¦so sad. Now I have a baby granddaughter myself who will go to a Welsh school and I want to be able to speak Welsh to her.
ā¦ I live in wales
I want to learn welsh because I like the welsh language.
I donāt have a āgoodā or rather practical reason as I donāt live in wales (or patagonia) nor do I come from wales but Iāve always had a strong desire to be a welsh speaker ever since it occured to me that maybe I wasnāt entirely incapable of learning languages (attempting to learn French in school made me think it was me who couldnāt learn languages, not the teaching method at fault).
A very warm welcome to the forum, @tsyesika - where do you live? Itās always particularly interesting having people who donāt live in Wales on hereā¦
Thank you for the warm welcome
I live in Sweden but Iām originally from around Caerhirfryn/Lancaster area.
I want to be a Welsh speaker because I want to support my daughter in her Welsh medium school.
It would change the way I can support her and communicate with her teachers.
I want to speak Welsh as my children are bilingual (both going to Welsh schools) and I would love to be able to chat to their teachers in Welsh and also to be able to speak Welsh to some of the customers that come into my place of work.
I want to be a Welsh speaker because Wales is my home now & I have Welsh speaking friends & family. I hope to impress my nieces by speaking to them in Welsh
(Also I ļø Gorkyās zygotic mynciās music & super furry animalsā music & would really love to sing along in Welsh )
Sāmae/Hello,
I have posted here a number of times, but I have not yet stated my own reasons. In truth-itās complicated. What does an Irish-American with no known family link to Cymru have to do with loving yr iaith Cymraeg the language of the Cymry? The easy answer would be that my wife is of the Cymry (Cymraes gogā¦) and was robbed of her distinctive speech as a small child who had no language other than English. I had none of my grandparentsā tongue myself (aside from names and community and the Casement foundation and pubs). This is a common thread of history that our people share. Just as the Cymry were welcome to ferry over for food during the War, I have noticed some Irish here sharing in the continuance of the language.
Long may this be so.
Link
Of the estimated 7,000 languages spoken in the world today, nearly half are in danger of disappearing. With or without wanting to, the dominance of languages like English is suffocating and killing off minority tongues at an extinction rate quicker than that of birds, mammals, fish and plants.
If we lose our languages, we lose our identity, we are unable to describe our world with the soul and beauty native to us, and lose our distinctiveness in a worldly morass of homogeneity.
I am proud to be a part of safeguarding this ancient tongue and I hope that you all feel just a bit of pride in it as well.
I did say it was complicated
When I retired, I decided to take a GCSE in a subject that Iād failed spectacularly at school; I chose Latin. The course included translations about the Celts, Druids and Boudicca and, the more I read, the more I wanted to learn a Celtic language. I chose Welsh because itās the most widely spoken, a beautiful language and I love Welsh mythology. I hope eventually to be able to read small extracts of the amazing Welsh mythology in Welsh. Weāll see
my fatherās family were Welsh and I love feeling part of the thriving exciting community of Welsh speakers. I want to visit Wales and have real conversations in shops etc and help in some small way to keep this beautiful language alive. I imagine Iāll feel thrilled at that point.
Also, my main aim is to be able to watch āPobol Y Cwmā without English subtitles Thank you very much to all involved with this wonderful course.
@lin-2 @jackie-butler @Sean-O @jennifer-3 @vanessa-jones @Kim-J
I love reading stories how learning Welsh links generations together! Even if those links are not readily apparent. I live in the United States and have Welsh ancestry, but I cannot place a person or location in Wales. When I sing along to Welsh songsā¦mostly mumble words I donāt know until I come to the words I do knowā¦ or watch a Welsh program or speak āyn y Cymraeg,ā I really enjoy the feeling of being connected to a group of people whose history goes back thousands of years. This forum is filled with great people who all share a passion for the language, and a surprising amount live outside of Wales. Thank you all for sharing.
I want to be a Welsh speaker because in the past 4/5 years living in Cardiff Iāve made so many friends who are 1st language/fluent/learners and Iād like to have a proper conversation with them in Welsh! In terms of the reaction from friends, Iād fully expect them to be pleased for me - and then say something I donāt understand, so I run away