Welsh/Alphabet
The Sounds of Welsh
[edit | edit source]This is enough to get you started. For a fuller guide, please see the reference work at Pronunciation of Welsh.
Consonants
[edit | edit source]We will start with learning the consonant sounds of Welsh. We've split them into 4 groups. Consonants in Welsh can only make one unique sound, as opposed to English which can make several sounds per consonant. For example, the c can make a k sound as in cat or a s sound as in city. When you learn the sound a consonant makes in Welsh, it will only ever make that sound you learn.
Consonant sounds same in English and Welsh
[edit | edit source]These consonants look the same in English and Welsh, and sound the same.
- b /b/ Like b in boy. Welsh example: bachgen (English: boy)
- c /k/ Like c in cat. Welsh example: cath (English cat)
- d /d/ Like d in dog. Welsh example: drwg (English bad)
- g /g/ Like g in gun. Welsh example: gardd (English garden)
- h /h/ Like h in happy. Welsh example: hen (English old)
- l /l/ Like l in lake. Welsh example: calon (English heart)
- m /m/ Like m in mad. Welsh example: mam (English mother)
- n /n/ Like n in none. Welsh example: nain (English grandmother)
- ng /ŋ/ Like the end of the English word sing. In Welsh, this letter can come at the front of a word. In Welsh, it is never pronounced with a hard g, as in the English finger. Welsh example: angau (English death)
- p /p/ Like p in poker. Welsh example: pen (English head)
- s /s/ Like s in sad. Welsh example: sebon (English soap)
- t /t/ Like t in tar. Welsh example: tŷ (English house)
- th /θ/ Like th in think. Welsh example: methu (English fail)
Consonant sounds in English, Different letter in Welsh
[edit | edit source]These sounds are found in English, but they are assigned to a different letter in Welsh. Train yourself to read them differently now.
- f /v/ Like v in violin. Welsh example: gafr (English goat)
- ff /f/ Like f in friend. Welsh example: ffrind (English friend)
- dd /ð/ Like th in then. Welsh example: hardd (English beautiful)
Consonant sounds in English, Not in Welsh
[edit | edit source]These sounds are in English, but you will not hear them in Welsh.
- The c in Welsh only makes a hard /k/ sound. It will never sound like an s, such as in the English city.
- The g only makes a /g/ sound. It will never sound like an English g, like in the English gender.
- The th in Welsh represents the th in English think. The dd represents the other th in English, like the word then.
- There is no z sound in Welsh.
Consonant sounds only in Welsh
[edit | edit source]These consonant sounds may be new to you.
- ch /x/ Like the Scottish loch or German composer Bach. Welsh example: chwech (English six)
- ll /ɬ/ The ll is a hard Welsh sound to make. It is best described as putting your tongue in the position of l and then blowing out air gently. Like saying a h and l simultaneously, but with more puff. Welsh example: llyn (English lake)
- r /r/ The Welsh r should always be trilled. Welsh example: ar (English on)
- rh /r̥/ The Welsh rh should be trilled with aspiration. Like saying a h and r simultaneously, but with more puff. Welsh example: rhan (English part)
Vowels
[edit | edit source]There are seven vowels in Welsh. Most vowels can be two different sounds. The y can take three different sounds. There are clear patterns on when to use which vowel sound, but for the beginning level: learn how to pronounce each word as you go along, and you'll eventually be able to logically deduce which vowel sound to use.
- a
- e
- i
- o
- u
- w
- y
Alphabet
[edit | edit source]Welsh Vocabulary • Alphabet • audio (upload) Yr Wyddor Gymraeg The Welsh Alphabet | |||
---|---|---|---|
Letter | Name of letter | Corresponding sounds | as in |
a | â | /a, ɑː/ | hat, Am. hot |
b | bî | /b/ | bag |
c | èc | /k/ | cat |
ch | ech | /x/ | like Scottish 'loch' |
d | dî | /d/ | dog |
dd | èdd | /ð/ | the |
e | ê | /ɛ, eː/ | pen |
f | èf | /v/ | veil |
ff | èff | /f/ | field |
g | èg | /g/ | get |
ng | èng | /ŋ/ | song |
h | âets | /h/ | hat |
i | î | /ɪ, iː/ | pin |
l | èl | /l/ | lava |
ll | ell | /ɬ/ | no equivalent |
m | èm | /m/ | mother |
n | en | /n/ | name |
o | ô | /ɔ, oː/ | hot, Am. pole |
p | pî | /p/ | please |
ph | ffî | /f/ | field |
r | èr | /r/ | rolled r |
rh | rhî, rhô | /r̥/ | same as above but unvoiced |
s | ès | /s/ | sit |
t | tî | /t/ | top |
th | èth | /θ/ | think |
u | û | /ɨ̞, ɨː/ (N), /ɪ, iː/ (S) | sit, seat |
w | ŵ | /ʊ, uː/ | put, loot |
y | ŷ | /ɨ̞, ɨː, ə/ (N), /ɪ, iː, ə/ (S) | kit, about |
- The names of the letters above are in Southern dialect. In the North, the letters are pronounced differently.
- h indicates voicelessness in mh, nh, and ngh.
- ph occurs occasionally in words derived from Greek (e.g. phenol) but more commonly as a result of aspirate mutation (e.g. ei phen-ôl)
- y indicates /ə/ in unstressed monosyllabic words (e.g. y "the", fy "my") or non-final syllables, but /ɨ̞, ɨː/ (N) or /ɪ, iː/ (S) everywhere else.
- The digraphs (letters consisting of two characters) are treated as a single letter (with the collation order as listed above), although the same combinations of characters can sometimes also arise as a juxtaposition of two separate letters. For example, the digraph ng representing /ŋ/ is alphabetised between g and h (alphabetical order llegach, lleng, lleiaf), but when ng is two letters representing /ŋg/ it is alphabetised between nf and nh (alphabetical order danfon, dangos, danheddog).
- si indicates /ʃ/ (as in English sheep) when followed by a vowel.
- di and ti sometimes indicate /dʒ/ (as in English joke) and /tʃ/ (as in English church)respectively when followed by a vowel. Otherwise /dʒ/ and /tʃ/ are spelled j and ts, but only in loanwords like jẁg "jug" and wats "watch".
- To pronounce the ll sound, blow while placing your tongue on the roof of your mouth.
- a b c ch d dd e f ff g ng h i j l ll m n o p ph r rh s t th u w y
- A B C Ch D Dd E F Ff G Ng H I J L Ll M N O P Ph R Rh S T Th U W Y
And saying it out loud : ah bee ec ech dee eh edd ef eff eg eng aetch ee-dot jay el ell em en o pee phee er rhee es tee eth ee-bedol oo uh