Rhos
Ar ganol y Rhos pryd hynny V oed" poncan tted uchel yn debyg i hen amdiffynfa a ttawer gerrig mawrion ar ei phen a charned fawr gerrig yn yr ochor ogledbl idi, ag mae hi i'w gweFd hyd y dyd" hedyw dan
Rhos, between Colwyn and ILandudno, had caught (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
Ar ganol y Rhos pryd hynny V oed" poncan tted uchel yn debyg i hen amdiffynfa a ttawer gerrig mawrion ar ei phen a charned fawr gerrig yn yr ochor ogledbl idi, ag mae hi i'w gweFd hyd y dyd" hedyw dan (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: Rhos, between Colwyn and ILandudno, had caught (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
"A fisherman from ILandritto yn Rhos, between Colwyn and ILandudno, had caught"
- attestation: Ar ganol y Rhos pryd hynny V oed" poncan tted uchel yn debyg i hen amdiffynfa a ttawer gerrig mawrion ar ei phen a charned fawr gerrig yn yr ochor ogledbl idi, ag mae hi i'w gweFd hyd y dyd" hedyw dan (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
"Ar ganol y Rhos pryd hynny V oed" poncan tted uchel yn debyg i hen amdiffynfa a ttawer gerrig mawrion ar ei phen a charned fawr gerrig yn yr ochor ogledbl idi, ag mae hi i'w gweFd hyd y dyd" hedyw dan yr enw Bryn y Pibion."
- comparison: Among other things, she related to me how she had, some twenty years before, visited a well in the parish of ILandritlo yn Rhos, namely Ffynnon Eilian, or Elian's Well, between Abergele and ILandudno, (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter VI: The Folklore of the Wells)
"Among other things, she related to me how she had, some twenty years before, visited a well in the parish of ILandritlo yn Rhos, namely Ffynnon Eilian, or Elian's Well, between Abergele and ILandudno, when her attention was directed to some bushes near the well, which had once been covered with bits of rags left by those who frequented the well."