Thoughts? Think they'd still be Wales to me. https://www.theguardian.com/football...-world-cup-faw
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Thoughts? Think they'd still be Wales to me. https://www.theguardian.com/football...-world-cup-faw
dml1954 might be right for once!
The (2011) census determined that 18.56% of the population could speak Welsh and 14.57% could speak, read and write in the language.
The most recent Annual Population Survey (June 2020), as conducted by the Office for National Statistics, suggests that 28.6% of people in Wales aged three and over were able to speak Welsh.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...Welsh-speakers
Dml may be even closer than that! 29.7% as of year ending June 2022. Seems a little high to me tbh
https://gov.wales/welsh-language-dat...2021-june-2022
My thoughts are no thank you , stick with Wales
Because 70% of the population cant speak Welsh. It is wrong to pander to the minority and therefore marginalise the majority. It is about time that the majority stood up to be counted against the vociferous and sometimes fanatical minority who basically run the country. Just because someone doesn’t speak the language doesn't make them any less Welsh or important.
Why is it wrong to try and keep alive a language that was almost wiped out by our neighbours?
Its hardly a hassle for anyone, you can call it Wales, others can call it Cymru. It's not as if we have many songs involving the words.
Why people are getting their knickers in a twist I don't know.
There have been a few discussions on here where there is a general agreement that the Welsh support and authorities seem to be amplifying slightly more nationalistic tones than they used to. Some support that, others dont. Personally, I think that's a dangerous road to go down and it seems Noel Moody may be behind some of it? It's notable that the Rep of Ireland did used to be known as Ireland.
I don't support this idea. Wales is what the majority of people in Wales refer to their country as. It's also how the rest of the world know us (if they know us at all)
I would feel less connection as a result to be honest. It's not comparable to our rebrand, but it is a rebrand nonetheless and seems a strange move to rock a steady boat.
I think it might appeal to the cracac in pontcanna
And those yes Cymru lot
But when Bryn Terfel sings the national anthem and says the blood of caradog flows through him then when asked by the BBC who are his sporting heroes he says fecking man United I say what a load of bollocks all this fake nationalism is
As the nomenclature 'Wales' is cognate with Wallachia (part of Romania), Wallonia (Southern Belgium) and Cornwall and effectively means 'stranger' or 'foreigner', it makes sense to adopt the name bestowed upon us by our own culture rather than a description foisted upon us by those not from these islands.
Anyway, Caerdydd are home on Wednesday
I don't get the reference to Turkey. Are they saying the Turks, officially and unofficially used to call themselves Turkey?
There's very different reasons why a Welsh person would happily call the team "Wales". For me it's being as I don't speak Welsh and the language is as foreign to me as Turkish. Rightly or wrongly.
Why confuse the international population anymore? Most barely know Wales as it is.
Why change something that is not Broken.
On English speaking broadcasters Sky/BT/BBC we can be referred to as Wales
and on S4C or any other Welsh publications they can call us Cymru.
Seems to work fine.
Doesn’t bother me in the slightest. Would help promote the Welsh (Cymru) language and is the Welsh word for Wales so not a rebrand really.
Not really. Turn on the radio and there's endless public service announcements in Welsh. Welsh is now above English on all new road signage etc. Texts from the NHS to my phone are in Welsh, followed by English. Parking machines are in Welsh by default, etc. English comes 2nd in everything. Wales is run by Welsh bigots. If that spreads to their football team they can stuff it.