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Mwya ofn yw i myfi

Ofn y paid ar f'anap i. I.D., A 14997/28.

' The greatest fear to me is the fear that my trouble will end.'

iv. When dydd da 'good day ' and nos da ' good night ' are followed by yd ' to thee ' and ywc/t ' to you ', da yd is contracted to daqd written daed ( 29 ii (2) ) and da ywch to AtfKwi, daewch, now reduced to dawch 30.

"Nos daewch" i'r ferch nis dichon-,

" Nos daed ti " nis dywaid hon. D.E., A 14967/18 (o. 1 18).

' [To say] " good night to you " to the maid avails not ; she will not say " good night to thee ".'

Breiniawl wyt o'r banvnwaed;

Barwn Ystepltwn, nos daed. L.G.C. 141; see 127, 480.

' Noble art thou of the blood of barons ; Baron of Stepleton, good night to thee.'

O'r cyff hwn a'r Cyffinwaed

Y caivn was dewr. Can' nos daed ! T.A., A 14975/102.

' Of this stock and the blood of Kyffin we have a brave youth. A hundred good nights to thee.'

Dydd daed D.E. p 83/103, dyddiau daed G.G1., M 146/203, D.G. 381.

Nos dawch is still in common use ; but daed is not now generally known. Silvan Evans quotes L.G.C. 141 (see above) and D.G. 381 under daed eqtv. of da,

v. oe 'to his, to her, to their' 160 ii (T); yw, i'w ' to his, to her, to their ' ib., 160 iv (2).

vi. y, i 'to ', O.W. di < Brit. *do is equivalent to the prefix dy- 65 iv (2), 156 i (13). It is strange that this prep, whose ist sg. is the only one in Ir. which has certainly a single -in (= W. *-/) is the only one in W. with -m ( = -mm). The -m is due, like the usual -mm in Ir., to the Kelt, doubling of the initial of an unacc. word following an accented monosyll., 217 iv(i); thus ym < *do~mml < *do moi. The corresponding form of the 2nd sg. would be *yth, cf. yth ' to thy ' ; but the form that survived was yd (id W.M. p. 279), as in daed ; by late analogical doubling this gave ytt (d-d > tt 111 ii (i)). It may be conjectured that the 3rd pers. forms were orig.

  • daw, *di, *du ', as these were mere suffixes in the conjugation of

other preps, it is probable that *&y was prefixed here to represent the prep. ; y would be assimilated to a following i or u, and perhaps Haw takes its i from i8i, O.W. didi L.L. 120. But the prep. *dl 156 i (ii) may have been prefixed, with an intensive force, as befoie *do- in di-Saior 195 i.