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Jashwntw wrote:Siomedig wrote:A form of o. Ohonof i, ohonot ti, ohono fo, ohoni hi, ohonon ni, ohonoch chi, ohonyn nhw.
O, so from? From me, from you, from him...?

sianco wrote:"Sai'n gweitho fory" < "Does dim ohona i yn gweithio fory" (or so they say!) "There's none of me working tomorrow".

Jashwntw wrote:sianco wrote:"Sai'n gweitho fory" < "Does dim ohona i yn gweithio fory" (or so they say!) "There's none of me working tomorrow".
Sianco, where you are from is dwi ddim and sa'i interchangable or is sa'i generally used pretty much all the time?

sianco wrote:I'm from Pencader in Carmarthenshire but I live in Trefor in Gwynedd.
"Sa i" is used in Pencader in ordinary speech.
"Dw i ddim" may be used in circumstances which are a little more formal.
"Dw i ddim" is used in the north.
"Nid wyf" is formal.

Jashwntw wrote:sianco wrote:I'm from Pencader in Carmarthenshire but I live in Trefor in Gwynedd.
"Sa i" is used in Pencader in ordinary speech.
"Dw i ddim" may be used in circumstances which are a little more formal.
"Dw i ddim" is used in the north.
"Nid wyf" is formal.
So, to your grandmother you would say dw i ddim, or just in an interview or something like that?

sianco wrote:No, to your grandmother you would say "sai'n". In an interview you would be more likely to say "Dw i ddim".

sianco wrote: "There's none of me working tomorrow".
I'm not so sure.


Brychan wrote:You would think that if so fe comes from nid oes dim ohono fe - you would get a interrogative tag os e
I would say:
Dyw e ddim yn dod nawr nag yw e - he's not coming now is he
But if you use so fe - shouldn't you say:
So fe'n dod nawr nag os e - does dim ohono fe'n dod nawr nag oes e
If some people say that now or used to say that then 'so fe' definately comes from 'nid oes dim ohono fe'


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