Soft Mutation in Welsh
Treiglad Meddal
Overview
The soft mutation (treiglad meddal) is the most common and most important of the three Welsh mutations, and understanding it is essential from the very beginning of your Welsh learning journey at the A1 level. Mutations are systematic changes to the initial consonant of a word, and they are triggered by specific grammatical contexts.
The soft mutation affects nine consonants, making it the mutation with the widest scope. It appears in an enormous number of everyday situations: after certain prepositions, after the definite article with feminine singular nouns, in questions and negatives, after certain conjunctions, and much more. You will encounter it in virtually every sentence you read or hear.
While mutations can seem intimidating at first, they follow predictable rules. Once you learn which consonants change and which contexts trigger the change, you will find that they become second nature with practice. Think of mutations not as exceptions but as the regular rhythm of the language.
How It Works
The soft mutation changes these nine initial consonants:
| Original | Mutated | Example |
|---|---|---|
| p | b | pen (head) → ei ben (his head) |
| t | d | tad (father) → dy dad (your father) |
| c | g | cath (cat) → y gath (the cat, feminine) |
| b | f | brawd (brother) → fy mrawd (my brother) |
| d | dd | dŵr (water) → y ddŵr |
| g | (disappears) | gardd (garden) → yr ardd (the garden, feminine) |
| m | f | mam (mother) → dy fam (your mother) |
| ll | l | llaw (hand) → ei law (his hand) |
| rh | r | rhosyn (rose) → y rosyn (the rose, feminine) |
Common Triggers
- Feminine singular nouns after "y/yr/'r": y gath (the cat), yr ardd (the garden)
- After "dy" (your): dy dad (your father)
- After "ei" (his): ei gar (his car)
- After many prepositions: i Gaerdydd (to Cardiff), am ddeg (at ten)
- Adjectives after feminine singular nouns: cath fach (a small cat)
- After "yn" (predicative): Mae e'n dda (He is good → dda from da)
- Direct object after short-form verbs: Gwelais i gar (I saw a car)
Examples in Context
| Welsh | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| cath → Mae gen i gath. | cat → I have a cat. | After "gen i" |
| tad → Fy nhad i? Na, dy dad di. | father → My father? No, your father. | "dy" triggers soft mutation |
| gardd → yn yr ardd | garden → in the garden | Feminine noun after article |
| bore → Bore da! | morning → Good morning! | "da" after masculine noun: no mutation |
| Caerdydd → i Gaerdydd | Cardiff → to Cardiff | After preposition "i" |
| cath fach | a small cat | Adjective mutates after feminine noun |
| Mae e'n dda. | He is good. | After predicative "yn" |
| Gwelais i gar. | I saw a car. | Direct object mutation |
| ci → dau gi | dog → two dogs | After "dau" |
| merch → y ferch | girl → the girl | Feminine singular after article |
Common Mistakes
Mutating after masculine nouns
- Wrong: y gi (the dog, masculine)
- Right: y ci
- Why: The definite article only triggers soft mutation of feminine singular nouns, not masculine ones.
Forgetting that "g" disappears
- Wrong: yr gardd (the garden)
- Right: yr ardd
- Why: When "g" undergoes soft mutation, it vanishes entirely. The word now starts with a vowel, so "yr" is used instead of "y".
Over-mutating in sequences
- Wrong: y fach gath (the small cat)
- Right: y gath fach
- Why: The noun mutates after the article, and the adjective mutates after a feminine noun — but word order matters. Adjectives follow the noun in Welsh.
Not recognizing mutated words in dictionaries
- Wrong: Looking up "fam" in the dictionary
- Right: Recognize "fam" as the soft mutation of "mam" and look up "mam"
- Why: Dictionaries list the unmutated (radical) form. Learning to mentally reverse mutations is a crucial skill.
Practice Tips
Memorize the nine changes: Create flashcards pairing original and mutated consonants. Drill these until you can instantly recall that p→b, t→d, c→g, and so on.
Keep a mutation trigger list: As you encounter new contexts that cause soft mutation, write them down. Reviewing your list regularly will help you internalize the patterns.
Read aloud daily: Choose a short Welsh text and read it aloud. When you spot a mutation, pause and identify the trigger. This trains your brain to process mutations in real time.
Related Concepts
Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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