This is no doubt what the Gwyddel would have said about Nance's Kernewek,
but Nance said that Kernewek is a form of Cornish, which it is, so bog of
to
your bog.
"moi" <moi@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:YySUe.5346$yF2.3803@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> This is so full of errors as to be laughable - but that is what davic is
> all about. It is not '***bric' but a conlang.
>
>> Verbs in Cornish and Breton adopt lenition after the negative particle,
>> but in Welsh all verbs adopt lenition except verbs that begin with C,
P,
>> T. ***bric follows Welsh usage on the presumption that ***bric is
closer
>> to Welsh that to Cornish and Breton.
>
> What? The mutation of C, P, T, is lenition - that is it turns C into
Ch,
> P into PH, and T into TH which is exactly what lenition is!
>
>
>> Rule 17
>>
>> Welsh verbs adopt lenition after the infinite particle yn. It is
presumed
>> that because of the ease with which the ***bric poems of Taliesin and
>> Aneirin were translated into Welsh that the same rule applies in
***bric.
>
> Welsh verbs don't lenite after the particle 'yn'. For example - Cerdded
> (walk) 'yn cerdded' (walking). Welsh nouns do lenite when they are used
> after 'yn' for example darlithydd (lecturer) mae'n ddarlithydd (he's a
> lecturer).
>
>
>
>
>


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