I just dipped into Twitter to read the fantastic news that the Snowdonia National Park Authority has voted to use the original Welsh names Yr Wyddfa #YrWyddfa and #Eryri rather than the imposed English #Snowdon and #Snowdonia. It's a massive win for reclaiming our #Welsh cultural heritage. I honestly can't believe the amount of hatred, abuse and racism in the Twitter comments from English people. I've no idea why they are so angry that another country wants to use its own language. #Cymraeg 🏴󠁧󠁒󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

@druid I think there are many reasons why some English people are so opposed to multilingualism (in any other language). Paranoia (they're talking about me), jealousy (they're doing something I can't), fear (I don't understand), controlfreakery (they should just use English) and snobbishness (English is used worldwide, why would anyone need another language). Any one person can have one or many of these feelings.

Fortunately, we're not all like that!

@suearcher @druid That first reason must be the source of that hackneyed myth - 'I walked into a pub and they all started speaking Welsh' ! 🀣
As if.
@marijeangordon @suearcher Shhhh... don't tell them it's all true. 🀣
@druid @marijeangordon @suearcher I’ve been on the receiving end of that - chattering away in Cymraeg with a friend in a restaurant in Aberystwyth and being glared at by all the Saeson… can confirm he and I only ever speak Cymraeg together πŸ˜„
@5357311 @marijeangordon @suearcher 🀣 There's some odd folk about. I love hearing any different language spoken.
@druid @5357311 @marijeangordon Me too. And as a dysgwr, I'm so happy that I'm starting to understand and speak another language!

@suearcher @druid @5357311 @marijeangordon

One of my favourite internet memes is of a woman speaking Welsh to her daughter (in Wales) and being told to stop speaking "foreign muck" πŸ€¦πŸ˜‚

https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/woman-told-stop-speaking-foreign-13598021

Woman speaking Welsh in Wales told to stop speaking 'foreign muck'

Elin Jones was shocked as she was confronted when speaking to her daughter while out shopping in Lampeter

WalesOnline

@TCMuffin @suearcher @5357311 @marijeangordon Ah yes, I remember that. Shocking. This bit made me actually LOL though:

"I have had comments from people saying β€˜go back to your own country’, which is very funny because I am from Aberystwyth.”. 🀣

@druid @suearcher @5357311 @marijeangordon

πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

@TCMuffin @druid @suearcher @5357311 @marijeangordon

There was a viral story here in America a few years back about a barista chastising a customer to "Speak English!" And the woman responded, "I'm British. I am speaking English."

The absolute fear that some people have of anything different to them is astonishing.

@RomanticSkeptic @TCMuffin @druid @5357311 @marijeangordon

Slightly off the point, but I heard a story of a guided tour in York stopping outside the Minster, and an American lady asking "If this building pre-war?" The guide replied "Madam, this building is pre-America!"

Also when my husband first moved to Manchester, someone told him to stop "talking posh", as he had a (very ordinary)London accent.

@suearcher @RomanticSkeptic @druid @5357311 @marijeangordon

Oh lord 🀦

I have a fairly neutral, but British accent, from working all over the UK and when people ask where I'm from and I say Wales, they accuse me of not sounding Welsh 🀦

@TCMuffin @suearcher @druid @5357311 @marijeangordon

I'm Hard of Hearing and also watch mainly UK, Irish, Nordic, European media, so I often pronounce words differently than most anyone else around me. My adult children like to tease me about it. Their face is whenever I say the word "almond" they ask me where the hell the "L" went. I'm almost afraid to say the word now. πŸ˜‚

@RomanticSkeptic @TCMuffin @suearcher @druid @marijeangordon Oh don’t worry about that. In huge swathes of England the L is conpletely silent so you’re perfectly fine.