Welsh | |
---|---|
Cymraeg, y Gymraeg | |
Native to | Wales and Argentina. |
Region | Spoken throughout Wales, in border-towns between England and Wales, and in the Chubut province of Argentina. |
Native speakers | 721,700 total speakers (2011) — Wales: 562,000 speakers, 19.0% of the population of Wales,[1] with 14.6% of the population (431,000) considering themselves fluent in Welsh — England: 150,000[2] — Chubut Province, Argentina: 5,000[3] — United States: 2,500[4] — Canada: 2,200[5] |
Early forms | |
Latin (Welsh alphabet) | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Wales |
Regulated by | Meri Huws, the Welsh Language Commissioner (since 1 April 2012)[6] and the Welsh Government (Llywodraeth Cymru) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | cy |
ISO 639-2 | wel (B) cym (T) |
ISO 639-3 | cym |
ELP | Welsh |
Linguasphere | 50-ABA |
Percentage of Welsh speakers by principal area |
The Welsh language is a Celtic language and the national language of Wales, a country that is part of the United Kingdom. In Welsh, it is known as Cymraeg, or yr iaith Gymraeg, which means "the Welsh language".
Welsh is still spoken throughout the region: about 21% of the people of Wales can speak Welsh. That is about 600,000 people, and some people outside Wales, including those in nearby England. Many people in Wales say they can understand some form of Welsh, such as spoken, written, or can read Welsh, even if they do not speak it all the time.
Even though almost all Welsh people can understand and use the English language, the Welsh language is still an important part of Welsh culture. So children in all schools in Wales have to study it. There are some schools that have almost all of their classes in Welsh, but most schools teach mainly in English. Welsh is taught as a second language in these schools.