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  1. Road signs in Wales. A Welsh-English bilingual sign in Newtown, Powys, with Welsh first, then English, and also Welsh place names without an English equivalent. Distances in miles. Road signs in Wales follow the same design principles as those in other parts of the United Kingdom.

  2. 18 de abr. de 2018 · Find the working drawings for the design and manufacture of traffic signs in Wales, including the Welsh language and the English language. The working drawings cover various types of traffic signs, such as warning, regulatory, informatory, directional, and lane control signs, as well as road markings and light signals.

  3. 22 de jul. de 2019 · A list of all the standard bilingual traffic signs which Welsh highways authorities can erect without authorisation from the Welsh Government. This is an Excel spreadsheet. The text is taken from the authoritative drawings available in PDF format from the Welsh Government website.

  4. Current policy. New regulations that came into force in 2016 mandate that all signs be in Welsh first, with the existing "English-priority" signage (in those areas where the local authority previously had such a policy) being replaced whenever they otherwise would (life expiry or altered road conditions).

  5. 30 de jan. de 2006 · Learn how to pronounce the Welsh words for common road signs in Wales, such as Araf (slow), Elen (no entry), and Cymru (Wales). Find out the difference between English and Welsh-priority areas and the house name generator.

  6. Category:Bilingual English-Welsh road signs in Wales. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. C. Bilingual city limit signs in Wales ‎ (21 F) The Traffic Signs (Welsh and English Language Provisions) Regulations and General Directions 1985 ‎ (100 F)

  7. Road signs in Wales follow the same design principles as those in other parts of the United Kingdom. All modern signs feature both Welsh - and English-language wording, with Welsh first signage present in some areas of Wales and mandated for all new signs, but some English first signage remains when it was legally allowed before 2016.