Love the heritage of tradition! Mabon is a favourite, for sure. Thank you for your time, the information shared, and suggestions for community building! 🎉😊
So lovely to see a video with actual video footage instead of AI generated clips. It really made your beautiful narration even more inviting and entertaining.
Thanks so much! I'd love to engage in more authenticity in the future and record my own footage/be more present on camera - with more time and confidence in the future 🥰
That's okay! Cymraeg is a wonderfully ancient Celtic language, and is also phonetic, meaning that words are always pronounced as they are spelt - unlike English, where words are pronounced in any which-way and rarely make sense😂 So in Cymraeg/Welsh, vowels are nearly always spoken like this: A: like the “a” in “cat” or “bat” E: like the “e” in “bet” or “let” I: like the “ee” in “feet” or “bee” O: like the “o” in “hot” or “pot” U: like the “ee” in “see” (in South Wales) or like the “i” in “bit” (in North Wales). W: Can be a vowel, pronounced like “oo” in “food”. Y: "eurgh"
Love the heritage of tradition! Mabon is a favourite, for sure. Thank you for your time, the information shared, and suggestions for community building! 🎉😊
Thank you so much, I'm so glad this was of value!
So lovely to see a video with actual video footage instead of AI generated clips. It really made your beautiful narration even more inviting and entertaining.
Thanks so much! I'd love to engage in more authenticity in the future and record my own footage/be more present on camera - with more time and confidence in the future 🥰
I love how the quarter days all have a theme of "Self Care"
The most important kind of love! 💕
Here at last,here at last! God bless us for da blessings of Autumn! I live for Autumn and Winter!
You and me both! 🍂🔥💕
I have always heard it as May-baun in the US. I am sure we pronounce Gaelic words wrong all the time.
That's okay! Cymraeg is a wonderfully ancient Celtic language, and is also phonetic, meaning that words are always pronounced as they are spelt - unlike English, where words are pronounced in any which-way and rarely make sense😂
So in Cymraeg/Welsh, vowels are nearly always spoken like this:
A: like the “a” in “cat” or “bat”
E: like the “e” in “bet” or “let”
I: like the “ee” in “feet” or “bee”
O: like the “o” in “hot” or “pot”
U: like the “ee” in “see” (in South Wales) or like the “i” in “bit” (in North Wales).
W: Can be a vowel, pronounced like “oo” in “food”.
Y: "eurgh"