Had to check that one out, though I found that Old Latin is over 2000 years old and Old Welsh is 1400 years old.wakenbake said:The language is one of the oldest in Europe, predating Latin, and is actually GROWING in use rather than shrinking.
Cymru am byth!
I have English relatives who had the misfortune to be visiting the week after =D We kept on serving them meals with only three peas on their plates and things like thatAlexWinter said:I'm English but I live in Wales because it's where I go to uni and my housemate is Welsh and he won't shut up about six nations.
It's actually not part of England, but your confusion is understandable.Tahaneira said:Don't go to Wales, Baldrick, it's a ghastly place. Huge gangs of tough sinewy men roam the valleys terrorising people with their close-harmony singing. You need half a pint of phlegm in your throat just to pronounce the placenames. Never ask for directions in Wales, you'll be washing spit out of your hair for a fortnight.
I'm sorry, I never thought I'd actually have a chance to use that quote. Anyways, that is the first, last, and only thing I have heard about it. And considering it comes from Blackadder, I don't think it's entirely accurate. I know it's a part of England and that's about it.
Da Orky Man said:So, have you ever heard of that little rocky outcropping of England the inhabitants call Wales? (The shaded bit)
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You see, on the occasion that I go out of the UK, I find that almost nobody has ever heard of us, although I kind of expected to be rather obscure
So I am asking you, my fellow Escapees, how aware are you of Wales? Thinks its an animal? Well enough to know a Welsh leisure centre when you see one? Or perhaps you are fluent in Welsh, descendant language of much of pre-Roman Europe, and bane of visitors without chest colds.
Or, for the brave amongst you, can you pronounce the names of such towns and villages as Llanfairfechan, Penmaenmawr, Llanelli or even the dreaded Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.