Understanding the “Welsh” [on hold]What does “interstitial effect” mean?meaning of the word “Reel”?Real meaning of “I am sorry I love you.”Can we say “probable” where we have to say “possible”?What's the meaning of “pillage and plunder”?What does 'as' mean when followed by v-ing?Help with understanding a sentenceWhat does “Take care sweets” mean?Need help in understanding the questionHelp to interpret a tricky component - 'understand' from a sentence by McCloskey
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Understanding the “Welsh” [on hold]
What does “interstitial effect” mean?meaning of the word “Reel”?Real meaning of “I am sorry I love you.”Can we say “probable” where we have to say “possible”?What's the meaning of “pillage and plunder”?What does 'as' mean when followed by v-ing?Help with understanding a sentenceWhat does “Take care sweets” mean?Need help in understanding the questionHelp to interpret a tricky component - 'understand' from a sentence by McCloskey
What is meant by Welsh ? I searched it but still it is confusing for me in the below case. I didn't understand the exact meaning of this.
"What happened to you guys helping us out by winning the Welsh?"
Can you please explain what does it mean
meaning
put on hold as off-topic by Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist♦ Mar 24 at 16:02
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist
add a comment |
What is meant by Welsh ? I searched it but still it is confusing for me in the below case. I didn't understand the exact meaning of this.
"What happened to you guys helping us out by winning the Welsh?"
Can you please explain what does it mean
meaning
put on hold as off-topic by Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist♦ Mar 24 at 16:02
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04
add a comment |
What is meant by Welsh ? I searched it but still it is confusing for me in the below case. I didn't understand the exact meaning of this.
"What happened to you guys helping us out by winning the Welsh?"
Can you please explain what does it mean
meaning
What is meant by Welsh ? I searched it but still it is confusing for me in the below case. I didn't understand the exact meaning of this.
"What happened to you guys helping us out by winning the Welsh?"
Can you please explain what does it mean
meaning
meaning
asked Mar 21 at 7:28
AbdulAbdul
1017
1017
put on hold as off-topic by Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist♦ Mar 24 at 16:02
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist
put on hold as off-topic by Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist♦ Mar 24 at 16:02
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Janus Bahs Jacquet, TrevorD, JJJ, curiousdannii, tchrist
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04
add a comment |
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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In the same vein as Chris H has suggested, could refer to winning the Welsh Open or another event with the word “Welsh” in the name. But yeah, generally it refers to the language or people from Wales. Beating the Welsh could also refer to beating them in a war or battle, historically.
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
In the same vein as Chris H has suggested, could refer to winning the Welsh Open or another event with the word “Welsh” in the name. But yeah, generally it refers to the language or people from Wales. Beating the Welsh could also refer to beating them in a war or battle, historically.
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
add a comment |
In the same vein as Chris H has suggested, could refer to winning the Welsh Open or another event with the word “Welsh” in the name. But yeah, generally it refers to the language or people from Wales. Beating the Welsh could also refer to beating them in a war or battle, historically.
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
add a comment |
In the same vein as Chris H has suggested, could refer to winning the Welsh Open or another event with the word “Welsh” in the name. But yeah, generally it refers to the language or people from Wales. Beating the Welsh could also refer to beating them in a war or battle, historically.
In the same vein as Chris H has suggested, could refer to winning the Welsh Open or another event with the word “Welsh” in the name. But yeah, generally it refers to the language or people from Wales. Beating the Welsh could also refer to beating them in a war or battle, historically.
answered Mar 21 at 11:04
LoganRokuLoganRoku
493
493
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
add a comment |
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
There is also the act of "welshing (or welching) on a deal" -- failing to follow through on a promise. This doesn't quite fit in the OP's case, but it's hard to say for sure without context.
– Hot Licks
Mar 21 at 11:42
add a comment |
If you've actually seen "winning the Welsh" please provide a source. "Beating the Welsh" would be much more common and almost always describe a sporting victory over the team representing Wales. In this case it probably refers to a league or the group stage of a competition where points scored in other matches affect the outcome. Given the timing perhaps the Six Nations rugby is the context
– Chris H
Mar 21 at 8:04