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Buwch, a cow.
Bwlch, a pass, or defile. Pl. bylchau.
Câd, battle, war.
Cader, a chair.
Cae, a field. Pl. caeau.
Caer, a fortress, or fortified town.
Cantrev, a district containing 100 townships. A canton, a hundred.
Capel, a chapel.
Careg, a stone. Pl. ceryg.
Carn, a heap of stones. The hoof of a horse.
Carnedd, a heap of stones. Pl. carneddau.
Castell, a castle. Pl. cestyll.
Ceulan, bank of a river.
Cevn, the bank, ridge of a hill.
Cîl, a recess. Cilvach, a small recess.
Clawdd, a hedge, dyke. Clawdd Offa, Offa’s dyke.
Clogwyn, a precipice.
Côch, red.
Coed, trees. Sing. coeden, a tree.
Côr, a circle, a choir. Bangor, high choir.
Corlan, a sheepfold.
Cors, a bog, or fen.
Craig, a rock, a crag. Pl. creigiau.
Croes, a cross.
Crug, a hillock. Pl. crugion.
Cwm, a valley, dingle, glen.
Cymmer, the junction of two rivers.
Dau, two.
Dehau, south, the right side.
Din, dinas, a city, a fort, a fortified place on a hill.
Dôl, a meadow.
Drws, a doorway.
Du, black; hence dwrdu, the river Dee; literally, Black-water.