Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda!


© Sarah Stevenson

Happy Holidays to everyone! Since this is the last article update before the New Year, I’m providing a guide to holiday greetings (and other useful words) in Welsh, as well as listing a few holiday traditions from Wales. I’ve also collected a few websites with information on customs, recipes, and music so you can celebrate the winter season in true Welsh fashion.

For help pronouncing words, check out my pronunciation guide.

Greetings:

Nadolig Llawen - Merry Christmas
Nadolig Hapus i chi - Happy Christmas to you
…a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda - …and a Happy New Year
Gwyliau Hapus - Happy Holidays
Dymuniadau gorau - Best Wishes
Iechyd da! - Cheers! (Good Health!)

It’s That Time of the Year:

Gaeaf - m. winter
Rhagfyr - m. December
y Nadolig - m. Christmas
Dydd Nadolig - Christmas Day
Nos cyn y Nadolig - Christmas Eve
Dydd Calan - New Year’s Day
Nos Galan - New Year’s Eve
Gwyl San Steffan - St. Stephen’s Day = Boxing Day

Holiday Items:

coeden Nadolig - f. Christmas tree
anrheg/-ion - f. present/-s
carden/cerdyn Nadolig - f. Christmas card/-s
Siôn Corn - Santa Claus

Now, here’s a holiday message to you in Welsh:
Gwyliau hapus i chi, a blwyddyn newydd dda. Dymuniadau gorau am gael llawer o anrhegion oddi wrth Siôn Corn dan y goeden Nadolig!

Why not use some of the above holiday greetings to send someone an e-card in Welsh? BBC Cymru’r Byd has several.


Source: Museum of Welsh Life

Holiday Traditions in Wales. Most people are familiar with the custom of bringing holly into the house as a symbol of eternal life; along with other evergreens such as rosemary, bay, and mistletoe, it is said to protect the house from evil. Plenty of other Welsh traditions are less well known, though, such as bringing the plough indoors and keeping it under the table through the holiday season!

Perhaps the most quintessentially Welsh holiday custom, however, is singing. The Welsh love to sing, and the tradition of Plygain (“daybreak”) singing in rural churches still continues in some parts of Wales. On the morning of Christmas Day, those observing this tradition rise very early or stay up all night to attend the Plygain service at the local parish church, usually between 3 and 6 a.m.

On that Christmas Eve prior to the Plygain service, people would traditionally spend the evening decorating the house and making merry. Earlier in the 20th century, revelry included drinking from the Wassail bowl, and in some regions people held a Noson Gyflaith or Toffee Evening as part of the Christmas celebrations. Friends and family would gather and take turns pulling toffee at this festive gathering.

     

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