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§ 191 makes no sense; a better reading seems to be ny hanẟenei 16/43 ( p. 92) ‘he could not rest’ (hanẟen, by dissim. > Mn. W. hamẟen ‘leisure’, hamẟenol ‘leisurely, slowly’; han- ‘without’ + den, √dhen‑: Skr. dadhan-ti ‘causes to run’).

The verb cyfarfyddaf â ‘I meet’ is conjugated like the above verbs (v.n. kyvarvot 58, 125, perf. sg. 3. kyvarvu do. 170, plup. sg. 3. cyfarvuassei ib.), except that the old forms were obsolete in Late Ml. W. But D.B. has kyveryw a mi  1385 ‘has met me, happened to me’; and ry-gyveryw a occurs in  42, changed to ry-gynneryw a in  29, as if it were a compound of deryw, the form cyveryw being apparently unknown, and the u (≡ v) mistaken for n.

i. (1) The verbs gwnn (gwn) ‘I know’, v.n. gwybot (gwybod), and adwaen ‘I am acquainted with’, v.n. adnabot (adnabod), are conjugated as follows in Ml. (and Mn.) W.