• @[email protected]
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    722 days ago

    Having read your comment I’d like your views on “Wrwgwai” - the South American country of Uruguay.

    • @[email protected]
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      822 days ago

      It’s easy. W is a vowel in Welsh. It sounds similar to ö in German and it can be modified as ŵ to elongate the sound such as in the word dŵr which means water.

      Wrwgwai or Wcrain (for example) are the natural way to spell those countries using the Welsh alphabet. Its a highly phonetic language believe it or not.

          • lad
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            321 days ago

            Afaik, comes from Latin that had no “U” and “V” was both vowel and consonant until some point in time.

          • @davepleasebehave
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            222 days ago

            Bug is supposedly a Welsh origin word that is spelt bwg. and that’s the limit of my knowledge

      • @[email protected]
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        422 days ago

        Yeah, I’m Welsh myself. I just wondered how somebody who struggled with Wmffre / Humphrey would do with the whole Wrwgwai thing. Some English speakers get it immediately others get a headache thinking about it.