Negation and Questions
Negyddol a Chwestiynau
Negation and Questions in Welsh
Overview
Learning to form negative sentences and questions is fundamental at the A1 level, as these patterns allow you to express disagreement, ask for information, and have real conversations. In Welsh, negation and question formation are closely linked to the verb "bod" (to be), since most everyday Welsh sentences are built around this verb.
Welsh uses different verb forms for affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences rather than simply adding "not" or inverting word order as English does. The negative particle "ddim" plays a central role, but the verb form itself also changes. Questions are formed by using special interrogative forms of the verb.
The system is very regular once you learn the patterns, and because you already know the affirmative forms of "bod," learning the negative and question forms is largely a matter of learning the corresponding forms.
How It Works
Negative Sentences with "Bod"
| Person | Affirmative | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| I | Dw i'n... | Dw i ddim yn... |
| You (informal) | Wyt ti'n... | Dwyt ti ddim yn... |
| He | Mae e'n... | Dyw e ddim yn... |
| She | Mae hi'n... | Dyw hi ddim yn... |
| We | Dyn ni'n... | Dyn ni ddim yn... |
| You (formal) | Dych chi'n... | Dych chi ddim yn... |
| They | Maen nhw'n... | Dyn nhw ddim yn... |
Question Forms with "Bod"
| Person | Question Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| You (informal) | Wyt ti'n...? | Wyt ti'n dod? |
| He/She/It | Ydy e/hi'n...? | Ydy e'n gweithio? |
| We | Ydyn ni'n...? | Ydyn ni'n mynd? |
| You (formal) | Dych chi'n...? | Dych chi'n deall? |
| They | Ydyn nhw'n...? | Ydyn nhw yma? |
Yes/No Answers
Welsh has no single word for "yes" or "no." Instead, you echo the verb:
| Question | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| Wyt ti'n dod? | Ydw | Nac ydw |
| Ydy e'n gweithio? | Ydy | Nac ydy |
| Dych chi'n deall? | Ydw/Ydyn | Nac ydw/Nac ydyn |
Examples in Context
| Welsh | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Dw i ddim yn deall. | I don't understand. | Negative first person |
| Wyt ti'n barod? | Are you ready? | Informal question |
| Ydy e'n gweithio heddiw? | Is he working today? | Third person question |
| Dyw hi ddim yn dod. | She is not coming. | Third person negative |
| Dyn ni ddim yn siŵr. | We are not sure. | Plural negative |
| Ydyn nhw'n byw yma? | Do they live here? | Plural question |
| Nac ydy, dyw e ddim yma. | No, he is not here. | Negative answer |
| Ydw, dw i'n hapus. | Yes, I am happy. | Affirmative answer |
| Dych chi ddim yn cofio? | Don't you remember? | Negative question |
| Dwyt ti ddim yn gwrando! | You are not listening! | Informal negative |
Common Mistakes
Using "na" or "ie" for yes/no
- Wrong: Na, dw i ddim yn dod.
- Right: Nac ydw, dw i ddim yn dod.
- Why: Welsh echoes the verb form for yes and no. "Na" on its own is not a complete answer.
Keeping "mae" in negatives
- Wrong: Mae e ddim yn dod.
- Right: Dyw e ddim yn dod.
- Why: The third person negative uses "dyw" (or "dydy"), not "mae." The verb form changes.
Placing "ddim" incorrectly
- Wrong: Dw i yn ddim deall.
- Right: Dw i ddim yn deall.
- Why: "Ddim" comes immediately after the pronoun, before "yn" and the verb-noun or adjective.
Practice Tips
Transform drills: Take ten affirmative sentences and convert each one to negative and question form. This builds the three-way pattern into your memory.
Practice yes/no answers: Have a friend ask you questions and respond with the correct echoed verb form. This is essential for natural conversation.
Listen to dialogues: Welsh conversation naturally alternates between statements, questions, and negatives. Listening to podcasts like "Pigion" (BBC Radio Cymru) exposes you to all three patterns in context.
Related Concepts
Prerequisite
Bod - Present TenseA1Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
Want to practice Negation and Questions and more Welsh grammar? Create a free account to study with spaced repetition.
Get Started Free