2019 Day 300
Dedh
Trei Hans
De
Sül,
seythves warn ügens
mis Hedra
Sunday,
27th
October
Barrys
o an jorna ma. E'n mettin my a wrüg
gwitha flogh. An maw bian a gòscas
et agan chei. Res veu dhen y vaga ha didhana. Teg o an awel, etho nei
eth mes rag kerdh bian. My a welas lester gwydn brâs
war an gorwel. Treweythüs
ew hedna reb an cost norh. An tycky-Duw ma ew coynt ewedh – thewa
pedn awartha awoles war vos! E'n dohajedh my a wrüg
lavürya
et agan lowarth – ma lies dreysen ha whath môy
linas dhe drehy. Thera lies gwibesen grevos ewedh. E'n androw dew
flogh wydn môy
a dheuth. Da ew ganjans gwary pel droos gen aga thas wydn. An pi a
veu lôwen
òja
aga dibarth – thera whans dhodho cavos boos e'n gwels.
This day was divided. In the morning I babysat. The little boy slept at our house. We had to feed him and amuse him. The weather was lovely, so we went out for a little walk. I saw a big white ship on the horizon. That is unusual by the north coast. This butterfly is odd as well – it is upside-down on a wall! In the afternoon I laboured in our garden – there are many brambles and even more stinging nettles to cut. There were lots of annoying gnats too. In the late afternoon two more grandchildren came. They like playing football with their grandfather. The magpie was happy after their departure – it wanted to find food in the grass.
Deg
ger rag hedhyw: Ten
words for today
androw
late
afternoon
(pedn)
awartha awoles upside
down
barrys
divided
up, separated
dibarth
departure
didhana
divert,
amuse, entertain
grevos
annoying
gwibesen
(f)
gnat, flying insect < collective
gwibes
kerdh
a walk, a stroll < verb
kerdhes (silent
dh)
maga
to feed, nurture
treweythüs
unusual, rare
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