eisteddfodwr
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Welsh eisteddfodwr.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌaɪstɛðˈvɒdə(ɹ)/, enPR: ī'stĕth-vŏdʹər
- Rhymes: -ɒdə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: ei‧stedd‧fod‧wr
Noun
eisteddfodwr (plural eisteddfodwyr)
- One who supports, attends, or participates in an eisteddfod.
- 2014, Alyce von Rothkirch, J.O. Francis, Realist Drama and Ethics: Culture, Place and Nation, University of Wales Press, page 127:
- n the other hand he declares carefully that his views are relatively unimportant and that he merely behaves like any other eisteddfodwr in similar circumstances.
- 1908, T.J. Griffths, The Cambrian, volume 28, page 504:
- He was an eisteddfodwr and delighted to hear good singing, whether it was in the sanctuary or at the eisteddfodic gatherings.
Welsh
Etymology
From eisteddfod + -wr (“-er”).
Pronunciation
- (North Wales, standard) IPA(key): /ˌei̯sdɛðˈvɔdʊr/, [ˌei̯stɛðˈvɔdʊr]
- (North Wales, colloquial) IPA(key): /sdɛðˈvɔdʊr/, [stɛðˈvɔdʊr]
- (South Wales, standard) IPA(key): /ˌei̯sdɛðˈvoːdʊr/, [ˌei̯stɛðˈvoːdʊr], /ˌei̯sdɛðˈvɔdʊr/, [ˌei̯stɛðˈvɔdʊr]
- (South Wales, colloquial) IPA(key): /sdɛðˈvoːdʊr/, [stɛðˈvoːdʊr], /sdɛðˈvɔdʊr/, [stɛðˈvɔdʊr]
Noun
eisteddfodwr m (plural eisteddfodwyr)
- eisteddfodwr, one who frequents eisteddfodau, especially as a competitor
- 1891, Y Geninen: cylchgrawn chwarterol cenedlaethol, Caernarfon, page 206:
- Fel eisteddfodwr, cystal ag fel cymanfâwr, gormod o duedd i daflu allan sylwadau rhy ddigrifol fyddai ei “bechod parod i'w amgylchu,” yr hyn, er hyny, iddo ef, oedd mor naturiol ag anadlu.
- As one who often frequented eisteddfodau, as much as he did singing festivals, his overfondness for making off-the-cuff humorous remarks was his “ever-present besetting sin”, which, in spite of that, was to him as natural as breathing.
Mutation
Welsh mutation | |||
---|---|---|---|
radical | soft | nasal | h-prothesis |
eisteddfodwr | unchanged | unchanged | heisteddfodwr |
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs. |
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