[welsh question]
I know this has been asked often in the real world, so I am going to ask here. Why is it that there are so many ppls in Wales; Country next to England for all you overseas GD`ers; who have the Sir name "Jones". The letter "J" does not even appear in the Welsh alphabet!?! Can anyone explain this? I don`t know the answer to this.
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yes and why are so many called 'Catherina Zeta'.
gay |
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A mixture of inbreeding and anglicisation.
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I would think that Jones is the english version of the surname, as we generally tend to take over most things when we annex a country.
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wales is a post conquest creation |
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how far back are we going Yahwe?
Coz i only remember the last 24 years :/ Come to think of it...where the bl**dy hell did Wales come from in the first place? |
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John, in it's various forms (Ieuan, amongst other things, in Wales) is a pretty common first name, and traditionally, the surname Jones meant 'Son of John'. I would imagine that welsh people were at some time known as 'Ieuans', and over time it has been anglicised.
Your use of semi-colons as parentheses is, to say the least, interesting. |
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The surname Jones is a patronymic name meaning "son of John (God has favored or gift of God)."
The forename Johannes was borrowed in the Roman period and became Ieuan in Welsh. This is pronounced something like Y-eye-an. When permanent surnames were adopted in Wales, Ieuan sometimes became Jones and sometimes Evans. A document of 1533 names Thomas ap Ieuan ap David ap Blethyn alias Thomas Jones. In the mediaeval period, John was borrowed and in time this became used as a surname, sometimes unchanged, sometimes in the style Jones. The forename John is known to have been used in Wales in the thirteenth century. http://genealogy.about.com/library/s...name-JONES.htm http://www.data-wales.co.uk/jones.htm Google was my friend. Thank you Google!!!! |
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^ right on the money, although John can also be Ioan, Sión, Sionyn or Sioni (as a point of no interest whatsoever I should imagine)
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So the Welsh stole the "J" and used it shamlessly as if it were there own.
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I don`t think so. "J" as in "John" I guess. My own name means "John" also, likewise, Ian, Sean, Ivan etc..
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No, I'd say it more likely occured during the time where the English decided it was illegal to speak Welsh. I'm not sure when this was brought into effect, but it was illegal until sometime in the 1950s. |
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Although there are no polyglot Welsh speakers in Wales (according to the last census) the language is spoken by 21% of the population. Judging by my own experience a far higher percentage can understand spoken Welsh even if they are unable to speak it. As for nicking J from the English alphabet .... it is creeping in to the language where English words are 'translated' into Welsh. Garaj (garage) is a good example of this. Many modern 'Welsh' words are the same as English Car (Car) and many others are similar enough for non-Welsh speakers to recognise them Ffrind (Friend) or Tacsi (Taxi). Noswaith dda |
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Garage, n, modurdy, garai, modurfa Also, my grandparents speak Welsh as their first language, and they assure me that to was illegal to speak Welsh - they were forced to speak English in public, even in school. Isn't a polyglot somebody who is multi-lingual? If this is true, don't you think there's at least one person who can speak English and Welsh/French/German/Spanish? Hell, my french teacher could also speak Spanish and German fluently. |
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To respond, 1) Funny that the Welsh dept of Lampeter Uni feel the word does exist. The plural is Garejys. 2) My grandmother didn't learn English until she was taught it at school FFS! She was born in 1912, so that puts her in the time period YOU claim the language was illegal. In addition she told me that English was never spoken by anybody in the village she grew up in. It was a legal requirement that Welsh children learn English, that doesn't make Welsh illegal as a spoken language. 3) You're right. I meant monoglot. Isn't it great that the Welsh are so passionate about their language we're prepared to argue about the spelling of a word? |
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There is some stuff on the BBC site which indicates some organised prejudice against Welsh use in schools earlier on, but again it wasn't illegal. As Mitc notes, the insistence on English being taught isn't quite the same as banning Welsh either. |
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Is it perhaps slang then? As I've never come across that word - I could phone somebody who would know, but tbh, I'm not that bothered, as I'm sure you're not either etc.
A quick google search reveals... Less than one hundred years ago the Welsh language was outlawed in Government and Education. Today, there are Welsh schools and all government departments dealing with Wales work in both English and Welsh. [http://www.eliamep.gr/eliamep/files/...ring_2001.pdf] Even though the English outlawed the Welsh language, it lived on through the singing, reciting and storytelling. [http://www.betws-y-coed.net/aboutus.htm] Welsh language was only (nearly) exterminated when the English outlawed it in the 19th century--not before, not even after Gwynedd fell. Same with Irish and Scots Gaelic. Since then, they are (however slowly) making a comback. [http://slacktivist.typepad.com/slack.../whatnot.html] The native language of Welsh was outlawed by it's English overlords, yet still survived. Some by ancient texts such as the Mabogineon, also by religious tracts and secret writings. Today, there is a resurgence of pride in the native language, and several radio and television stations broadcast in the language. [http://www.greendragonartist.com/BIwales.htm] as a result of the 1536 Act of Union - when Wales officially became part of the United Kingdom - the use of the Welsh language was banned from public life, including churches. Scholars and church leaders at the time, worried about the demise of the Welsh language, set about translating the Bible and the Book of Common Prayer so that people could read them at home in their mother tongue. [http://www.wfn.org/2003/07/msg00073.html] And I'm sure there's plenty more to boot. |
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I didnt see the post you made before I posted tbh. But I was just looking to justify the point my grandparents told me a while ago. there doesn't seem to be much available on google, but I'm sure the whole story is on the internet somewhere.
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it was never illegal to speak welsh.
to claim otherwise is to distort the truth for political purposes creating the illusion that there is welsh unity under an oppressive english state. It's rubbish. |
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Yes, that's exactly right - I'm a political activist trying to overthrow England.
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with all due respect I don't need to justify the reason for your mistake.
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If the majority of people on Wales are called Jones, I can only hoper that Zeta Jones is an anomaly, because if they're all like her, Cardiff muist be the biggest brothel in the world.
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your right about it not being illegal .. but it might as well have been ..
my mums welsh .. use of the welsh language was not just not encouraged but punishable in her school. They had to use english .. were taught to write only in english so now my mum barely remembers any welsh, and cannot write it at all, i find that sad, her heritage was taken away from her, tho she did teach me to count to ten in welsh, i just remember, 1 2 and 3 now. |
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Try speaking latin in a chemistry lesson and you won't be allowed. You can't even speak latin in a court room. That's because of efficiency and clarity. It's not illegal. It's practicle |
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Surely even if it were not technically illegal it would be as close to the line as you could possibly take it. Quite frankly, I don't feel particularly strongly about this issue, but also don't see how it could be called anything but illegal? |
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I'm just asking what you would call it?
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School rules. |
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But these school rules were put into place all of a sudden for a reason. I for one can't think of anything sensible that would justify this. It wasn't just a case of in lessons, but also in the schoolyard.
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the definition of squirming is "having a non-issue that you keep repeating despite the fact that every time you have mentioned the issue before you have been proved wrong on the facts". I am sorry if I upset you because I ruined an enjoyable lie with the truth. But how long are you going to go on? |
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I was attempting to clarify something that you didn't understand fully. I don't understand exactly went on either, hence it being a discussion. I am however telling you what I percieve to be the truth - if you can disprove it infallibly then by all means I'll accept your point, but you have said nothing to prove your own statements either.
If you want to try and discredit my point then please continue - but there's nothing particularly enjoyable about this discussion worth lying about. |
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Are we just playing the "he who posts last, wins" game here? I've already posted the extremly limited amount of "evidence" that I could find googling simple phrases and what I remember my grandparents telling me. Neither you nor I can claim to have found irrefutable proof either way so basically it comes down to opinion and loosely formed arguments. (Cue "my opinion is worth more than yours" card)
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A) Post the name of the Statute (Act) which states that it is llegal B) Post the name of the case whereby someone was prosecuted or sued for doing it. BECAUSE when you don't do that you may as well claim that "calling cheese a pet is illegal" or "calling chairs pudding is illegal". I can't give you evidence and sources to show that calling cheese a pet IS NOT ILLEGAL because no one would waste their time writing that statute or making that case. |
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If the evil English monarchy had outlawed Welsh i doubt they would have let parliament pass a bill to allow the production of a Welsh-language bible in the 17th century.
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The passing of the 1536 and 1542 Acts of Union brought a significant change in the official use of Welsh, and the language would not be used as an official language again until after the passing of the 1942 Welsh Courts Act – four hundred years later. The purpose of the Acts of Union was to make Wales part of England, and therefore English became the official language of business and administration in Wales. Following the Acts it was not possible for any monolingual Welsh speaker to hold official office in Wales, and although the language was not banned, it lost its status, and brought with it centuries of steady linguistic decline. The Welsh Bible Welsh would have been in grave danger during the Tudor Period if the Bible had not been translated into the language. Bishop William Morgan of Llanrhaedr ym Mochnant’s translation which appeared in 1588, helped to boost the language. As Wales was a country dominated by religion, which played a pivotal role in people's lives, the Bible allowed Welsh to remain as the language of the church and religion. English may have been the official language of Wales, but the Bible helped to safeguard the future of the Welsh language for many centuries. |
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it is not acceptable to just quote something. you must make a comment.* read the whole thread :P |
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