"Men like my father cannot die. They are with me still, real in memory as they were in flesh, loving and beloved forever. How green was my valley, then?"
My Mum passed away a couple of weeks ago, a proud welsh woman who lived in England for 50 years but never forgot her roots in south wales. I have chosen this to be played at her funeral and when she goes behind the curtain its so beautiful. Thank you
To the people in the comments who moan about Welsh being too hard or awkward, try investing more than a day into it. Welsh is spoken by 500,00 - 800,000 people. It has been spoken in Britain for thousands of years, before and alongside English, and it and its speakers are worthy of respect. It really isn't a difficult language to learn in comparison withother languages like Chinese, Basque or any other language. Instead of rolling over and playing along with tired old jokes and stereotypes, people need to learn about Welsh. So when someone says, 'Welsh is too hard' or 'Welsh has no vowels', don't play along, correct them respectfully. There are aspects of the language that appear difficult, but in reality, they're quite common. Like consonant mutation, we see this in English as well as Welsh: leaf - leaves, knife - knives. Don't fuel ignorance. Welsh has 7 vowels: A E I O U W Y. I amd W can also act as consonants. The single consonants are as follows: B C D F G H J L M N P R S T Double consonants* : Ch Dd Ff Ng (Ngh) Mh Nh Ph Rh Th *despite containing two letters, the double consonants count as single letters. And each consonant represents 1 sound, as does each vowel besides U, Y, I and W. C, as in Latin, always has the sound k F always has the sound v, as in 'very' or 'of' Ff always has the sound f, as in 'fish' or 'off' G as in Good, never as in germ. Ch as in Scouse booch or Scottish Loch Dd has the sound of, 'th', as in The, This, Those. Th = Thin, Thought, Through. W has two sounds, as in: Water, War, and Cool, fool. And so on. Oni fynnwch fyned yn waeth nag anifeiliaid, mynnwch addysg yn eich iaith.
at the moment i cant read the bottom part (mostly because of being born and brought up in the south/valleys) but i do certainly hope i can return fluent any idea on how i can learn more than basic sentances than Duolingo? -much abliged if you do know.
Jacob Parry I've been learning Welsh on my own for the last three years and I was surprised how easy it was to pick up. Forget everything you know about English and just learn it, as is, and it's really not that hard. The character I portray at the renaissance faire I work at is Welsh (when everyone else wanted to be Irish, Scottish or English) and there have been a few times I've run into a Welsh family who get so excited to not only see a Welsh character but to hear Welsh spoken and sung. It's a fun language!
@@TaranJHook Just goes to show easy the language is if you put time, effort and a genuine passion into learning it! Sounds like a fun role to play, by the way!
“I have no idea to this day what those two Italian ladies were singing about. ... I'd like to think they were singing about something so beautiful it can't be expressed in words, and it makes your heart ache because of it."
you say that but our language is dying. 95% of conversations are in english, with a few welsh words spattered in them. this is in wales itself. hell, i don't even know welsh, and yet i was born and bred in wales in a welsh speaking family.
Diolch yn fawr iawn. Yn hollol hardd. Y gan hon a roddodd fy enw i mi, yr wyf yn falch ohoni. 🏴🌼 “Thank you very much. Absolutely beautiful. It was this song that gave me my name, of which I am proud” 🇬🇧🥀
Iaith hardd yw Cymraeg, dwi’n caru siarad Cymraeg 🏴🏴 Welsh is a beautiful langauge, I love speaking Welsh 🏴🏴 Im so lucky to be able to speak Welsh! 🎉
We remember the victims of the Aberfan Disaster in 1966 which took the lives of many, and they shall never be forgotten, especially through this song. I'r rhai a garwyn ac y galarwn o'u colli.
If you get chance, do listen to the 'Soul Music' programme on BBC Sounds that is all about the song Myfanwy (originally broadcast on Radio 4 in 2014, series 18) www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/search?q=soul+music+myfanwy The whole programme is wonderful in explaining what this music means to people, but there is a particularly heartrending section about 20 minutes in that covers the Aberfan Disaster and has a description from a Scottish ex soldier who helped dig children from the rubble in 1966 with 'Myfanwy' playing in his head. I warn you it is very emotional listening (I'm shedding tears just thinking of it, I was a child in Wales when the disaster happened, my Da used to visit Aberfan every year after it happened to pay his respects) but it is an amazing piece of broadcasting and well worth a listen if you love this song.
Im English not Welsh (proudly part Welsh though with a Welsh last name) I've got a question. Why are your people not enthusiastically migrating back to England where your ancestors got kicked out of? The Bretons in the middle ages were desperate to return to England. To Britain. So why aren't modern Bretons using modern economic and travel opportunities to move to Britain?
My father is from Wales, my mother from England where I grew up (both of my parents have died) I used to love going to wales for holidays when I was a child and getting to hear my dad chatting to his family and friends in their Welsh language; I only wish my dad had taught me more than nos da and how to count to ten in Welsh, oh and Sit mae hevu (sp)
I hate that we were pushed into English speaking schools rather then our own welsh schools but things are looking up there’s more welsh schools now more than ever not like back in the 80s plus sport rugby and football is helping massively Keep the language alive ❤
Theres a very large increase in speaker since the 2000s about a 3rd can speak fluent now (last i checked) and it looks like its only increasing although CO19 sorta messed up education tho, but maybe itll get back on track. Cant wait to see the stats in the next few years
the problem with welsh speaking schools is that it can make university or higher education more difficult if you go to an english speaking course afterwards- i've had family who really struggled because of it in uni.
@@JamesBryce-yq8vs I'm quite optimistic. My first language is not English either, but I am studying in the UK. I used to meet a Welsh speaker on the street saying to me"my English is not good enough because my first language is welsh". But I think he was too humble. His English was much better than most international students including me. Welsh speakers' English may not be as perfect as their Welsh, but they are true bilingual, fluent in both Welsh and English. While a majority of English native speakers are monolingual.
Typical anglophone prejudice. What part of "All Welsh speakers are bilingual" don't you understand? Your assertion is without foundation and frankly risible
God bless Wales! I have had a lot of good times in Wales and felt much kindness. It is your country but if I could have just 6ft... Love to the boys from Tregaron practising for their stag night in Rhandymeirion (?). Nos da!
Such a beautiful, powerful arrangement (i see Jenkins name there, so no surprise!) Makes you wish you were Welsh! Found when playing Cory Band videos, a wonderful find, thanks for the upload
@@jacobparry177 I can confirm that French spelling is scary, even after four years of studying it at school (or maybe because of that). Welsh spelling however is logical and relatively easy to memorise in my opinion. While I definitely haven't picked up most of the grammar after only nine month of learning, it's been very enjoyable.
Welsh is still the dominant language in parts of North Wales. When I visited Blaenau Ffestiniog nearly everyone was Welsh-speaking. But I've spent far more time in the south (in Newport) where you hear much less Welsh.
I hear my ancestors calling me back from across the ocean to a land I’ve never been but my blood has I long to return to Anglesey I am American from birth but welsh at heart
@Penderyn Lewsyn thank you and Meurig was the first name of my 13th great grandfather I think and his son was sir John meyrick but I also believe around the twelfth century my 22nd great grandfather still was of significance in wales his name was madog or madoc ap Samuel a welsh prince
@@oro7114 family history books compiled by my American ancestors we also have family get togethers and my elders have told me stories about our past since about 7 years old
My ancestry is Welsh on Dad's side / English on Mom's side - both raised in their native ways - boy it was interesting - "Dad how come you married Mom? (answer) They run slower" - as yrs. past Dad lost his Welsh but did use 1 word a lot to us boys - (spelling?) it sounded like caughta gag (we didn't know the meaning but we all fill silent) - beautiful singing - love it!
@Alex John Thank you for the spelling & definition - all these yrs. (81) & I felt that's what it meant - a side note: I questioned my Dad's Welshness because he was a poor singer but that didn't stop him from singing at church (I miss hearing him now) - again thanks
@Alex John 11:30 am PST - Sat. for me - my grandfather was a miner in northern Wales - fled there because he wanted to organize a union - ended up in Missouri USA with family (turn of the century - 1900's) - he was part of organizing a union in the state - yes his older brothers & sisters could sing so my dad felt left out
@@peterah7957Cornish is a reconstructed language, it went extinct and had to be reconstructed using Welsh and Breton grammar. Manx and Scottish Gaelic are both From the Goidelic branch of the Celtic languages, coming from Ireland. The only two continuously surviving languages of the Brittonic branch of Celtic are Welsh and Breton which is spoken on mainland Europe in what is now France. So yes Welsh is the only surviving indigenous British language.
This would be a great national anthem for wales. I can just imagine sheep peacefully grazing in a flowery field near a castle as the Shepard eats a nice picnic with his trusty sheepdog.
As a fan of 'Let's Play' by Mongie, I approve of this melody. I can see Charles Jones growing up with it...and humming it, occasionally. (Newbies, he shows up in chapter 7)
I wish I was Welsh. I am American and currently learning Welsh on Duolingo. The language is fascinating to me and I want to learn more about Welsh culture and history.
Okay, i'm not going to lie, but i cried by listening this song, I'M SORRY BUT THIS SONG, IS FUCKING BEAUTIFUL, THAT'S THE FIRST TIME I CRY BY A SONG OMG
"Men like my father cannot die. They are with me still, real in memory as they were in flesh, loving and beloved forever. How green was my valley, then?"
❤ Huw Morgan ❤
My Mum passed away a couple of weeks ago, a proud welsh woman who lived in England for 50 years but never forgot her roots in south wales. I have chosen this to be played at her funeral and when she goes behind the curtain its so beautiful. Thank you
To the people in the comments who moan about Welsh being too hard or awkward, try investing more than a day into it. Welsh is spoken by 500,00 - 800,000 people. It has been spoken in Britain for thousands of years, before and alongside English, and it and its speakers are worthy of respect.
It really isn't a difficult language to learn in comparison withother languages like Chinese, Basque or any other language.
Instead of rolling over and playing along with tired old jokes and stereotypes, people need to learn about Welsh. So when someone says, 'Welsh is too hard' or 'Welsh has no vowels', don't play along, correct them respectfully.
There are aspects of the language that appear difficult, but in reality, they're quite common. Like consonant mutation, we see this in English as well as Welsh: leaf - leaves, knife - knives.
Don't fuel ignorance.
Welsh has 7 vowels: A E I O U W Y. I amd W can also act as consonants.
The single consonants are as follows:
B C D F G H J L M N P R S T
Double consonants* : Ch Dd Ff Ng (Ngh) Mh Nh Ph Rh Th
*despite containing two letters, the double consonants count as single letters. And each consonant represents 1 sound, as does each vowel besides U, Y, I and W.
C, as in Latin, always has the sound k
F always has the sound v, as in 'very' or 'of'
Ff always has the sound f, as in 'fish' or 'off'
G as in Good, never as in germ.
Ch as in Scouse booch or Scottish Loch
Dd has the sound of, 'th', as in The, This, Those.
Th = Thin, Thought, Through.
W has two sounds, as in: Water, War, and Cool, fool.
And so on.
Oni fynnwch fyned yn waeth nag anifeiliaid, mynnwch addysg yn eich iaith.
at the moment i cant read the bottom part (mostly because of being born and brought up in the south/valleys) but i do certainly hope i can return fluent
any idea on how i can learn more than basic sentances than Duolingo?
-much abliged if you do know.
Say Something in Welsh, Parallel.cymru, r/learnwelsh on Reddit and Doctor Cymraeg on Twitter
@@FunTime-jw5dz Diolch
Jacob Parry I've been learning Welsh on my own for the last three years and I was surprised how easy it was to pick up. Forget everything you know about English and just learn it, as is, and it's really not that hard. The character I portray at the renaissance faire I work at is Welsh (when everyone else wanted to be Irish, Scottish or English) and there have been a few times I've run into a Welsh family who get so excited to not only see a Welsh character but to hear Welsh spoken and sung. It's a fun language!
@@TaranJHook Just goes to show easy the language is if you put time, effort and a genuine passion into learning it!
Sounds like a fun role to play, by the way!
Song? Good
Lyrics? Sweet
Cymru? Am byth
-Hotel? Trivago-
Are you Russian?
@@vaishnoryanimator4245 what, no. Why?
@@cyrclack5616 in Russia, there is meme...
Sorry)
@@vaishnoryanimator4245 oh that meme is global mate, don't worry about it
Mae Cymraeg yn iaith hardd! Welsh is a beautiful language!
Greetings from Estonia! 🇪🇪🏴
its just gibberish lol
@@SuperGibaLogan shut up
@SuperGibaLogan Being narrow-minded really does blind one to the beauty of other cultures doesn’t it
@@SuperGibaLogan cau mochyn Saesneg
@@SuperGibaLogan Welsh iyan alam ko ring parang hindi nga ba isang wika pere iyon ang mainan sa mga ibang wika
In this context , I think language is almost superfluous.
The whole piece is utterly gorgeous.
“I have no idea to this day what those two Italian ladies were singing about. ... I'd like to think they were singing about something so beautiful it can't be expressed in words, and it makes your heart ache because of it."
Long live the Welsh
FE GODWN NI ETO!!!!
🏴
you say that but our language is dying. 95% of conversations are in english, with a few welsh words spattered in them.
this is in wales itself. hell, i don't even know welsh, and yet i was born and bred in wales in a welsh speaking family.
@Anthony Mitchell yn union👏🏼
@@CoremanitetheNeko You are wrong but I forgive you because I am better than you.
Diawn
Diolch yn fawr iawn. Yn hollol hardd. Y gan hon a roddodd fy enw i mi, yr wyf yn falch ohoni. 🏴🌼
“Thank you very much. Absolutely beautiful. It was this song that gave me my name, of which I am proud” 🇬🇧🥀
Respect from Kurdistan.
WALES 🤜🤛 KURDİSTAN 🏴❤️☀️💚
Bakûr?
Iaith hardd yw Cymraeg, dwi’n caru siarad Cymraeg 🏴🏴
Welsh is a beautiful langauge, I love speaking Welsh 🏴🏴
Im so lucky to be able to speak Welsh! 🎉
Support Cymru from Ukraine ,🏴🤝🇺🇦
Grew up listening to this, but this is the first time I have really understood the words. So thank you, thank you for the english subtitles.
We remember the victims of the Aberfan Disaster in 1966 which took the lives of many, and they shall never be forgotten, especially through this song.
I'r rhai a garwyn ac y galarwn o'u colli.
If you get chance, do listen to the 'Soul Music' programme on BBC Sounds that is all about the song Myfanwy (originally broadcast on Radio 4 in 2014, series 18)
www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/search?q=soul+music+myfanwy
The whole programme is wonderful in explaining what this music means to people, but there is a particularly heartrending section about 20 minutes in that covers the Aberfan Disaster and has a description from a Scottish ex soldier who helped dig children from the rubble in 1966 with 'Myfanwy' playing in his head. I warn you it is very emotional listening (I'm shedding tears just thinking of it, I was a child in Wales when the disaster happened, my Da used to visit Aberfan every year after it happened to pay his respects) but it is an amazing piece of broadcasting and well worth a listen if you love this song.
I was 10 at the time and still feel emotional when people talk about Aberfan. May the children and their teachers Rest In Peace.
@@Bruce-1956 I was six My uncle Colin was involved in the aftermath. It was terrible.
Cofiwin aberfan
@@suzyq578 isoulmusic
Soul mus
ic
.
..
Love from Brittany to our Welsh cousins!
Love from Wales to our Britannic cousins!
Brittany sucks
LIL BRITANNIA
Im English not Welsh (proudly part Welsh though with a Welsh last name)
I've got a question. Why are your people not enthusiastically migrating back to England where your ancestors got kicked out of?
The Bretons in the middle ages were desperate to return to England. To Britain. So why aren't modern Bretons using modern economic and travel opportunities to move to Britain?
@@noahtylerpritchett2682Mate have you seen the state of England nowadays?
My father is from Wales, my mother from England where I grew up (both of my parents have died) I used to love going to wales for holidays when I was a child and getting to hear my dad chatting to his family and friends in their Welsh language; I only wish my dad had taught me more than nos da and how to count to ten in Welsh, oh and Sit mae hevu (sp)
I hate that we were pushed into English speaking schools rather then our own welsh schools but things are looking up there’s more welsh schools now more than ever not like back in the 80s plus sport rugby and football is helping massively
Keep the language alive ❤
Theres a very large increase in speaker since the 2000s about a 3rd can speak fluent now (last i checked) and it looks like its only increasing although CO19 sorta messed up education tho, but maybe itll get back on track. Cant wait to see the stats in the next few years
The welsh government is pushing for 1 million speakers by 2050
the problem with welsh speaking schools is that it can make university or higher education more difficult if you go to an english speaking course afterwards- i've had family who really struggled because of it in uni.
@@JamesBryce-yq8vs I'm quite optimistic. My first language is not English either, but I am studying in the UK. I used to meet a Welsh speaker on the street saying to me"my English is not good enough because my first language is welsh". But I think he was too humble. His English was much better than most international students including me. Welsh speakers' English may not be as perfect as their Welsh, but they are true bilingual, fluent in both Welsh and English. While a majority of English native speakers are monolingual.
Typical anglophone prejudice. What part of "All Welsh speakers are bilingual" don't you understand? Your assertion is without foundation and frankly risible
everyone is talking about the language and no one mentioned how sad the song is
It's often sung at funerals, such a sad song ❤️
It’s relatable :(
This love letter is more epic than some national anthems.
This tune is so moving!
Diolch 🏴
man, i understand this is a song about departing from your beloved but damn does it tug at the heart quite a bit.
Very Blessed to be Welsh. This song gives me chills every time I listen to it. CYMRU AM BYTH!!!!!!!
Longue vie aux peuples brittonique 🇲🇫🏴
God bless Wales! I have had a lot of good times in Wales and felt much kindness. It is your country but if I could have just 6ft... Love to the boys from Tregaron practising for their stag night in Rhandymeirion (?). Nos da!
Thank you for posting this lovely and moving song. My Mum's favourite, we played it at her funeral xx
Three things you never do, under any circumstances
>Run with scissors
>Drink and drive
>Challenge a Welshman to a singing contest
Such a beautiful, powerful arrangement (i see Jenkins name there, so no surprise!) Makes you wish you were Welsh! Found when playing Cory Band videos, a wonderful find, thanks for the upload
What a sad and moving song of bitter-sweet love.
Ahhhh the voice of home 🏴🏴
Překrásná píseň, je zvláštní, jak jinak se welština vyslovuje. Velký dík a pozdrav z Česka.
Yes, I speak welsh and Czech. It’s weird how when you speak welsh it’s suddenly not weird haha
@@esmerat ☺️🖐️Dana
@@danasumova6581 🙏
Wrote in North East Wales, Llangollen, up Dinas bran. I hope one day north east wales gets the recognition it deserves in Wales.
Quel chant magnifique qui exprime la beauté d’un amour profond ! Bravo les Gallois.
That writing system is a bit complicated, but the language is heavenly beautiful.
It's absolutely no trouble once you put the time and effort to learn it.
Gaeilge, French and English would scare people more.
@@jacobparry177 I can confirm that French spelling is scary, even after four years of studying it at school (or maybe because of that).
Welsh spelling however is logical and relatively easy to memorise in my opinion. While I definitely haven't picked up most of the grammar after only nine month of learning, it's been very enjoyable.
It has the same writing system as English Vietnamese or Zulu if you didnt know with a different Orthography
"A bit"
@@jacobparry177 But there are not a lot of ppl that can speak Welsh.I wanna start to learn it soon but without any help I can't do it :/
Beautiful. A song kept in my heart for a childhood sweetheart, the one that got away.
Absolutely superb!! Voices and music, all is perfect!!! Amazing....
Sadly, the celtic languages are becoming more and more extinct. I hope Welsh and Irish become more dominant in that reigion
And also I hope that Scotland, Brittany, Cornwall and Galicia rise again
@Bara thats good news
@Bara Nice seeing you around Bara.
Since a high percentige of the celtic nations are leaning toward independace.....who knows
Welsh is still the dominant language in parts of North Wales. When I visited Blaenau Ffestiniog nearly everyone was Welsh-speaking. But I've spent far more time in the south (in Newport) where you hear much less Welsh.
John Ford, Richard Llewellyn: "How Green Was My Valley"
btw.: The gorgeous romantic ruin in the video is Caerphilly Castle, southern Wales
I hear my ancestors calling me back from across the ocean to a land I’ve never been but my blood has I long to return to Anglesey I am American from birth but welsh at heart
Hello Myrick. Greetings from Anglesey north wales🏴🏴🏴 hope you make it here one day👍🏴🌼🌼
@Penderyn Lewsyn thank you and Meurig was the first name of my 13th great grandfather I think and his son was sir John meyrick but I also believe around the twelfth century my 22nd great grandfather still was of significance in wales his name was madog or madoc ap Samuel a welsh prince
@@myrick1769 how can you trace your ancestry so far?
@@oro7114 family history books compiled by my American ancestors we also have family get togethers and my elders have told me stories about our past since about 7 years old
@penderyn8794it should return to being Mona
My ancestry is Welsh on Dad's side / English on Mom's side - both raised in their native ways - boy it was interesting - "Dad how come you married Mom? (answer) They run slower" - as yrs. past Dad lost his Welsh but did use 1 word a lot to us boys - (spelling?) it sounded like caughta gag (we didn't know the meaning but we all fill silent) - beautiful singing - love it!
@Alex John Thank you for the spelling & definition - all these yrs. (81) & I felt that's what it meant - a side note: I questioned my Dad's Welshness because he was a poor singer but that didn't stop him from singing at church (I miss hearing him now) - again thanks
@Alex John 11:30 am PST - Sat. for me - my grandfather was a miner in northern Wales - fled there because he wanted to organize a union - ended up in Missouri USA with family (turn of the century - 1900's) - he was part of organizing a union in the state - yes his older brothers & sisters could sing so my dad felt left out
@@georgerichards3943 After 82 Years, you finally found out that your dad was telling you to shut up, all thanks to a TH-cam Comment!
I think the saying you were talking about is cau dy ceg, which means shut your mouth lol
Beautiful ...from 🇧🇪 with love...
I was high when I listened to this and at first I thought there was a choir of angels whispering into my ears lol. Beautiful song!
We'll be here till judgement day!
My heart yearns oh my! Most beautiful and brings me to tears
Minha amada é Galêsa, meu encanto por essa nação cresce com o tempo e minha curiosidade aumenta tão bem.
As someone with Welsh ancestors this song really puts me at peace, beautiful song. 🏴♥️🏴
that woul be an amazing comment if the english flag wasnt there
@@aerondafydd132 anglophobia
@@aerondafydd132 He added it Because he was born in England.
@@aerondafydd132 To each his own. 👍
@@DaDoM123 The coloniser and imperialist horror cries at the thought of not being liked :(
It's nice to read an English translation of this song. I don't know any Welsh. And a very good rendition too.
Beautiful. This tune is used in "Oh Home Beloved Where e'er I Wonder"
Its truly awful how the Welsh are often frowned upon for wanting to speak this beautiful language of their own.
That’s because Welsh is the only native language of Britain. The English establishment hate it for that reason.
That's not correct ....Cornish is still being used aswel as Manx and alba @@alynwillams4297
@@peterah7957Cornish is a reconstructed language, it went extinct and had to be reconstructed using Welsh and Breton grammar.
Manx and Scottish Gaelic are both From the Goidelic branch of the Celtic languages, coming from Ireland.
The only two continuously surviving languages of the Brittonic branch of Celtic are Welsh and Breton which is spoken on mainland Europe in what is now France.
So yes Welsh is the only surviving indigenous British language.
Lovely song. Soothing to the mind.
This would be a great national anthem for wales. I can just imagine sheep peacefully grazing in a flowery field near a castle as the Shepard eats a nice picnic with his trusty sheepdog.
Wales already has a badass anthem called Hen Wlad fy Nhadau
Coziest song I have in a long time
Listened to it several times now . Difficult song to sing but you’ve done a great job . ❤
Such a beautiful song sung with passion in there souls
As a fan of 'Let's Play' by Mongie, I approve of this melody. I can see Charles Jones growing up with it...and humming it, occasionally. (Newbies, he shows up in chapter 7)
it remains us of a special holyday in LLANDUDNO with John and Rita Horton Bieniek
I wish I was Welsh. I am American and currently learning Welsh on Duolingo. The language is fascinating to me and I want to learn more about Welsh culture and history.
Beautiful! I wonder if this song was the basis for the 'Seekers', 'The Carnival is Over'.
Is... beautiful. Simply beautiful
I would love to learn Welsh
When people are saying my native language is one of the hardest in the world but they just forgot about Welsh...
Polish
@Biracial Boy no-no, CORNISH!
Except that finnish is considered the hardest of them all ^^;
Irish is definitely the hardest. Half of the letters in an Irish word aren't even pronounced.
@@iammcwaffles5514 but the whole treiglad system is difficult. Welsh first language and I still struggle every now and then
INCREDIBLE SONG AND VOICES.
My English partner heard this and said myfanwy, brought a tear to my eye, beautiful song ❤
A bydd yr iaith Gymraeg yn fyw!
Ry'n ni yma o hyd , my sweet language is my soul my life , yma o hyd we are still here .
Charlotte Church.., I am on My Way..❤❤❤❤. Put the kettle on. . ❤
Diawn u make me proud becuse I am welsh and I am in llanelli and I really like this song
The Welsh language is ear-candy. Cymru byw hir. 🏴
The nicest most tuneful "Dear Jane" letter you'll ever hear.
Excellent arrangement
Okay, i'm not going to lie, but i cried by listening this song, I'M SORRY BUT THIS SONG, IS FUCKING BEAUTIFUL, THAT'S THE FIRST TIME I CRY BY A SONG OMG
:]
and you shall cry once more
@@folk_. Dang someone responded to my comment after a year lol
@@sl0doodles513 CRY
@@folk_. YES I DO :(((
Semplicemente meravigliosa e struggente
I grew up in Wales. Beautiful place with a beautiful Language. I'm English born, Welsh raised. So I'm proudly British. My Welsh is rusty AF now sadly.
I love Celts :))
Beautiful!
Yes time for my native welsh superiority of failing to learn welsh
Il gallese è una lingua dolcissima... Meravigliosa per cantare... E lo dico io che sono italiano e parlo un po di gallese...
CYMRU AM BYTH 🤩🏴
Many thanks my Myfannywi is here , I luv her so much my ❤️
Love this music -( have Welsh ancestors)...... - Love this Beautiful Land and language ......
GOOSEBUMPS
Beautiful
wonderful song
In Loving Memory of our darling Mum & Dad, all relations and friends ♥️
Time for the land of song and story to take its rightful place among the nations of the world and gain independence.
Beautiful I hearing of rugby match when the choirs sing
Such a beautiful song no matter the language.
dw i ddim yn siarad gymraeg, ond dw i'n dysgu hi, ac dw i'n caru yr iaith!
Our greetings to Llandudno from the netherlands
Beautiful ❤️
Hello this is sung beautifully, does anyone know the choir singing or the name of the full recording please? Thank you
Only Men Aloud choir
He always wanted to be buried at Sea see...
Literally here just to figure out how to pronounce the name Myfanwy from a book. Still not sure, a song might not be the best choice.
The tv show Little Britain has a character named Myfanwy
My heart is crying.....❤
The the way they said “Gentle cheeks” made me laugh
🇬🇷❤🏴
Sounds like its being spoken in reverse. Great song tho i listened to it for hours on repeat while studying
My name is Myfanwy
Beautiful!!!!!!!
Cymru am Byth!
Not in a million dreams ❤❤
Cymru belongs to Cymry, not to English!!!
Midsomer Wales Episode 🤩
The Welsh Language has over half a Million Speakers!
1 million speakers world wide.
@@alynwillams4297 Damn.....
That's a lot more than i thought-
@@cakeisyummy5755 hopefully it will continue to grow.
@@alynwillams4297 :D
The welsh government are pushing for a million speakers by 2050 ;)