cambrophone
Collocations
4ADJ.
suitable
CAMBROPHONE + NOUN
caernarfon, location, wda
PREP.
in, in
ADV.
moreover
Definitions
adj
Welsh-speaking.
But, symbolically, Welsh language media production looks highly suitable for a Cambrophone location. Moreover, in view of the success of the media cluster in Cambrophone Caernarfon, the WDA comes under pressure from the west Wales lobby to stimulate a similar media industry presence around Carmarthen.
Compare the most distinctive feature of English renderings of the English of Welsh speakers. The substitution of voiceless plosives for voiced ones in the speech of characters from Fluellen in William Shakespeare’s The Life of Henry the Fift (1599; Q 1600, F 1623), most apparent in Act II of the F, and Sir Hugh Evans in The Merry Wives of Windsor (1597–98?; Q 1602, F 1623), here and there in the F, to Morgan in Tobias Smollett’s The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748), chapter 25 (“a petter penny” for a petter penny [Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies. Published According to the True Originall Copies (London, 1623), D2r]; “Got pless my soul!” [The Adventures of Roderick Random, ed. Paul-Gabriel Boucé (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979), 146]), manifests how ears attuned to the relatively weakly aspirated voiced plosives of native English interpret the corresponding sounds in cambrophone English speakers: the aspiration that accompanies voiced plosives in Welsh English is almost as strong as that accompanying voiceless plosives in non-Welsh varieties of British English.
noun
A person who speaks Welsh.
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Synonyms
Antonyms
Idioms & Phrases
Example Bank
3But, symbolically, Welsh language media production looks highly suitable for a Cambrophone location. Moreover, in view of the success of the media cluster in Cambrophone Caernarfon, the WDA comes unde
WiktionaryCompare the most distinctive feature of English renderings of the English of Welsh speakers. The substitution of voiceless plosives for voiced ones in the speech of characters from Fluellen in William
WiktionaryHowever, by far the most Englishes in Wales are ‘contact varieties’ arising from the interplay of Welsh and English structural influences, reflecting the historical fact that such Englishes exist as t
Wiktionary