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16 October 2014
Ysbyty BrynaberCatchphrase

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Ysbyty Brynaber

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Âé¶¹Éç - Catchphrase - Ysbyty Brynaber - Week 12


Week 12 - Main grammatical points
Gallu

We have already come across various forms of gallu - to be able to or can as in Galla i - I can and Gallwn i - I could. Here is another tense.

Arwyn says to Jenny:
Allet ti fod wedi gwasgu'r botwm mute - You could have pressed the mute button
And Jenny responds:
A gallet ti fod wedi mynd allan o'r stafell - And you could have gone out of the room.

Here are the full forms

Gallwn i fod wedi - I could have
Gallet ti fod wedi - You could have
Gallai hi fod wedi - She could have
Gallai e or Gallai o fod wedi - He could have
Gallai Dic fod wedi - Dic could have
Gallen ni fod wedi - We could have
Gallech chi fod wedi - You could have
Gallen nhw fod wedi - They could have

Gan

We've already come across the prepositions o, wrth, ar and their respective forms with pronouns. Gan meaning 'with' or 'by' changes in the same way:

Gen i
Gen ti
Ganddo fe/Ganddo fo
Ganddi hi
Gennyn ni sometimes pronounced Gynnon ni
Gennych chi or Gynnoch chi
Ganddyn nhw or Gynnon nhw

Wendy's father suffers a heart attack and there's no telling whether he'll pull through. When you're not sure of the future, when there's no telling, you can use the phrase 'sdim dal' - does dim dal - there is no telling.

Hoffi

There are a variety of ways of using 'hoffi'
Dw i'n hoffi Wendy - I like Wendy
Dw i'n ei hoffi hi - I like her

Dw i'n hoff o Wendy - I'm fond of Wendy
Dw i'n hoff ohoni hi - I'm fond of her

Here's the preposition 'o' again, remember that it changes with every pronoun

I'm fond of her - dw i'n hoff ohoni hi I'm fond of him - dw i'n hoff ohono fe

You can also use hoff to mean favourite

Fy hoff gân i
Ei hoff gân hi
notice the treiglad meddal/soft mutation after 'hoff'

When talking about Wendy's father Dic says:
ei drydedd wraig e ydy hi - She's his third wife.

Note the difference between third husband and third wife

Trydydd gwr. - Trydedd wraig.

Note that apart from first - cyntaf and ail - second all other ordinal forms follow the same pattern.

Cyntaf - first always follows the noun y bachgen cyntaf - y ferch gyntaf

Ail comes before the noun and is always followed by the soft mutation yr ail fachgen - yr ail ferch.

Useful Expressions

Ail farn - second opinion
Dyna'r cyfan - that's all
Oes rhywbeth o'i le? - is anything wrong?/

o'i le - out of place
Claddu - to bury
Bron â sythu - nearly frozen
Ble yn y byd mawr - where on earth (one of the phrases we heard during the second week)
Look out for the north Wales form for 'to understand' - dallt. The south Wales form is deall but in north Wales they say dallt - Dw i ddim yn dallt - I don't understand

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