Does anyone have a reasonable grasp of how gaelic/celtic names come together with their vowels and constanants?
A friend and I (his name is Amargein, pronounced "AW-vuh-reen") were trying to figure out what my name would be in welsh/gaelic/celtic spelling. I tried to look up even "Lucina" and couldn't come up with much.
Maybe someone more familiar might be able to help?
A friend and I (his name is Amargein, pronounced "AW-vuh-reen") were trying to figure out what my name would be in welsh/gaelic/celtic spelling. I tried to look up even "Lucina" and couldn't come up with much.
Maybe someone more familiar might be able to help?
no subject
Date: 2008-06-10 07:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-10 07:19 pm (UTC)Ly'wsyndrhyyl
Ly'w = loo / syn = sin / dhry = dree / yl = el.
I'm admittedly not sure about the yl part. I got a lot of this from sites that break down the phonetics. Lugh and ly'w are both Loo, so....I picked the prettier one. :D
And I know Rh is "ri" and adding a y makes it "ree" (as in Rhys).
So I stumbled a bit, but I think it's passable.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-10 07:23 pm (UTC)Lly'wsyndrhyyl. Or some approximation there of. Maybe the yy changes things.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-10 10:07 pm (UTC)Like kL almost...
on Ll
Date: 2008-06-10 10:10 pm (UTC)2. Drop the an part and say tler without using your vocal chords. In other words, whisper.
3. While saying this, try to sustain (hold) the l as long as possible. It should sound a little like air hissing out of a bicycle tire. That's the ll sound in Welsh.
Re: on Ll
Date: 2008-06-10 11:52 pm (UTC)Re: on Ll
Date: 2008-06-11 02:35 am (UTC)Re: on Ll
Date: 2008-06-11 07:05 pm (UTC)