 Fy fawr yn cymrydol i'r cymrydol yn siaradau cymrydol a fyddwn i'r gwrs gilydd ar yr ysgrifydd a fyddwn i'n gwybod i'n gwybod, sy'n meddwl o'r gwahanol i'r cymrydol, mae hynny'n gwybod, mae yw ymddoch yn gwneud o bod, yn ymddoch i'r cymrydol, i'r cymrydol, i'r cymrydol, i'r cymrydol, ond yr ymddoch yn cael ei ddweud. Cymru oedd y ffaith yw'r byw yn ystyried arweinio'r ffordd. Mae'r ffordd oedd ydych chi'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio'r law. A oedd y law yn ddiddordeb yn ymgyrch i ddweud o'r rhain. Felly, yn ymgyrchau ar y law o'r ffawr o'r offensiaeth cyfnodol, y cysylltu ffawr yn ymgyrchol yn ymgyrchol, yn ymgyrchol o'r ffawr o'r consent, o ffawr o'r ffawr o'r ffawr o'r consent. For the offensive rape to be committed, we need a complainant who was not consenting to the sexual intercourse. So what do we do in a case where the victim says, or the alleged victim says, that she only consented because she was drunk and had she been sober she wouldn't have consented? What do we do with that as a matter of law? Should that mean that for the purposes of the law of rape she wasn't actually consenting to that intercourse? Would it make any difference to our evaluation of that situation if it was the defendant who had applied her with the alcohol perhaps deliberately to get her drunk hoping that he'd then be able to have intercourse with her? Another slightly different example, what if we have a defendant who has some sort of sexually transmitted disease which he or she hasn't disclosed to the sexual partner and that sexual partner consents to intercourse perhaps instigates the sexual encounter, subsequently discovers the sexually transmitted disease and says oh my goodness I would never have consented to that had I known about the sexually transmitted disease. Can we say in that situation that that complainant nevertheless consented to sex on that occasion? So that's just two I think really fascinating examples which I hope will give you some insight into some of the sorts of questions that we have to consider on the criminal law course. Thank you.