Welsh Pronunciation
From Festipedia, hosted by the FR Heritage Group
- (This article is about general rules of pronunciation. You might want the pronunciation of Welsh Names on the Railway.)
Points to note -
- Welsh orthography avoids silent letters so every letter is pronounced.
- There is a mainly close correspondence between letters and sounds, so most letters in Welsh are pronounced the same every time, though there are exceptions to this. For instance, the letter "y" can be pronounced in various ways, often depending on its position in the word.
- Note that in Welsh the following count as single letters: "ch", "dd", "ng", "ll", "ph", and "th". Also, "w" and "i" can count as both vowels and consonants.
- Some sounds are slightly different in North Wales to those in the South or the "standard" language.
- Please refer below to notes on how to pronounce "dd", "ll", "ch", etc.
- In a multi-syllabic word, the penultimate syllable is usually the one stressed.
Contents |
[edit]General guide to Welsh pronunciation
[edit]Consonants
| B | As in English |
| C | Always hard as in "cow", NOT as in "ceiling" |
| CH | As in Scottish "loch" (guttural "kh"-type sound) |
| D | As in English |
| DD | Soft "th" as in English "the", never hard as in "think" |
| F | As English "v" |
| FF | Like English "f" |
| G | As in English "gun" never as in "gin" |
| NG | As in English "singer"; rarely as in English "finger" |
| H | As in English |
| J | As in English (this is not a native Welsh sound) |
| L | As in English |
| LL | A voiceless "l", put your tongue in the "l" position and breathe out noisily without voice |
| M | As in English |
| N | As in English |
| P | As in English |
| PH | As in English "phone"; it represents the same sound as "ff" |
| R | A rolled "r" |
| RH | Like "r", followed by an aspiration of breath, which almost makes it sound like "hr" |
| S | Always hard, as in English "kiss", not like a "z" as in "is". "Si" is pronounced as "sh" when followed by another vowel |
| T | As in English |
| TH | Like "th" in English "thug", never as in "this" |
| TS | (rare) Like "ch" in English "chip". (This is not a native Welsh sound) |
[edit]Vowels
| A | Short as in "can" |
| Â | Long as in "car" |
| E | Short as in "pet" |
| Ê | Long as in "pear" |
| I | Short or long as in "pin" |
| Î | Long "i" as in "seen" |
| O | Usually short as in "hot" |
| Ô | Long as in "cor!" |
| U, Û | Short as in "pin" or long as in "seen" (in North Wales, these vowels are pronounced with the tongue retracted from the front position) |
| W | usually "oo" as in English "put" |
| Ŵ | "oo" as in English "boot" |
| Y, Ŷ | In final syllables, as in "pin", "keen", but elsewhere as in "come", and on its own it is pronounced like the schwa vowel in the unstressed version of the English word "a" (indefinite article) - "y" by itself is the definite article "the". |
N.B. the circumflex is not always used to show long vowels; long vowels are used before voiced stops and fricatives; short vowels before voiceless ones|} |}
[edit]Dipthongs (combined vowel sounds)
| ae, ai, au | These combinations sound like "eye" In the North, at the end of a word they tend to be pronounced as "a" |
| ei, eu | In the North these combinations largely sound like "ay", though the initial element is more like an "uh" sound than an "a" |
| aw | As in "cow" |
| ew | We don't really have this sound in English. The e is short as in "get", followed by a short "oo" sound |
| iw/uw | "i" followed by a short "oo" (a bit like as in "new") |
| ow | This is similar to the "o" in "home", so Welsh word "brown" sounds more like "condone" than the English word |
| oe, oi, oy | Like "oy" in "boy" |
| wy | There are actually two versions of this diphthong: pronounced like "wee" or "oo-ee" |
[edit]Mutations
In Welsh the initial letter of a word can mutate in a predictable way.
There are 3 types of mutation, which means that a name like, say, Porthmadog, might variously be seen/heard as Porthmadog, Borthmadog, Mhorthmadog and Phorthmadog.
[edit]Soft mutation
As far as place names are concerned, the soft mutation is most likely to occur after the words "i" (to) or "o" (from)
In all, 9 letters soft mutate.
Examples -
(P > B) i Borthmadog or o Borthmadog (Porthmadog)
(C > G) i Gaernarfon or o Gaernarfon (Caernarfon)
(T > D) i Dan-y-bwlch or o Dan-y-Bwlch (Tan-y-Bwlch)
(B > F) i Flaenau or o Flaenau (Blaenau)
(M > F) i Finffordd or o Finffordd (Minffordd)
(RH > R) i Riwbryfdir or o Riwbryfdir (Rhiwbryfdir)
(D > DD) i Ddeiniolen (Deiniolen) (note that Dinas does not mutate to "Ddinas")
(G > -) i Lan-yr-Afon (Glan-yr-Afon)
(LL > L) i Langollen (Llangollen)
Also, when 2 words are put together to form a compound word, the second usually mutates.
[edit]Nasal Mutation
With place names this is mutation is only likely to occur after the word "yn" (in).
In all, 6 letters mutate nasaly.
Examples -
(P > MH) Ym Mhorthmadog. (Say "Um Horthmadog")
(B > M) Ym Meddgelert
(C > NGH) Yng Nghaernarfon (Say "Ung Hire-nar-von")
(G > NG) Yng Ngwynedd (Say "Ung Winedh")
(T > NH) Yn Nhan-y-bwlch. (Say "Un Han-a-boolkh")
(D > N) Yn Ninbych. (Say "Un Ninbikh")
Note that the word for "in" (yn) also changes in some of these examples.
[edit]Aspirate Mutation
With place names the most likely cause of the aspirate mutation is after the word "a" (and).
Only 3 letters aspirate mutate.
Examples -
(P > PH) Blaenau a Phorthmadog
(C > CH) Porthmadog a Chaernarfon
(T > TH) Dduallt a Than-y-bwlch