I have a picture of that Train Station in my photo albums. I went there about 10 years ago to get the photo, because it was in the Guinness Book of Records.
It's up in North Wales and most Welsh people just call it Llanfair (Clan Ver) It's hard to even write the word phonetically due to Welsh pronunciation of "LL".
It means: St Mary's church in the hollow of the white hazel near to the fierce whirlpool and the church of St Tysilio of the red cave.
However, I don't know why they didn't separate the words, I think they just wanted the longest place name in GB.
If you look at the GB & Ireland game map, it's on the island at the top of Wales, called Anglesey (Angle's Island), which incidentally, also shows Britain's Anglo Saxon history with Angles, Anglia, England (Angland), which incidentally brings me to my home town of Swansea, which again was derived from the Anglo Saxon "Sveinsey" (Sveinn's Island).
I have a picture of that Train Station in my photo albums. I went there about 10 years ago to get the photo, because it was in the Guinness Book of Records.
It's up in North Wales and most Welsh people just call it Llanfair ([i]Clan Ver[/i]) It's hard to even write the word phonetically due to Welsh pronunciation of "LL".
It means: St Mary's church in the hollow of the white hazel near to the fierce whirlpool and the church of St Tysilio of the red cave.
However, I don't know why they didn't separate the words, I think they just wanted the longest place name in GB.
If you look at the GB & Ireland game map, it's on the island at the top of Wales, called Anglesey (Angle's Island), which incidentally, also shows Britain's Anglo Saxon history with Angles, Anglia, England (Angland), which incidentally brings me to my home town of Swansea, which again was derived from the Anglo Saxon "Sveinsey" (Sveinn's Island).
Hyd yn oed er fy mod Cymraeg , dim ond yn siarad Saesneg, felly yr wyf yn gobeithio y bydd y cyfieithu yn gywir.