How To Use Irish In A Sentence

  • While the Irish government generates a lot of noisy, self-righteous cant about the evils of cigarettes at home, it makes a pretty packet from ‘selling death’ abroad.
  • The heroic deeds of this brave and noble Irishman have brought honour and glory to his native land.
  • About 10,000 Irish patients contract the superbug each year.
  • Distilled in the old Irish tradition this pure pot still single malt whiskey uses only the most natural Irish ingredients of barley and fresh spring water.
  • The Irish actor was as famous for his varied movie roles as his drinking and womanising.
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  • Trust the Irish to give it to you straight, with no blarney, when it's something as important as drink.
  • He went on to scarify the same companies for being only interested in putting on the tried and the tested to the exclusion of modern works by Irish writers and composers.
  • Paul Williams is a master of talking horseshit, but even a guffer like him finds it hard to fill pages every week with shite sensationalism about the Irish criminal underworld. Irish Blogs
  • More an Irish sprite than anything, Mairead leapt, twirled, and 'arabesqued' her way across the stage courting us through her violin. Dr. Cara Barker: The Beauty of Giving Your Whole Heart
  • By turning your head, you seemed to take in the whole sweep of Irish history, from the Vikings to the plantation.
  • Founded in Sep of 2004, IrishEnvy. com has grown in to a premiere web portal upon a Internet for grown up as well as intelligent Notre Dame Fighting Irish entertainment discussion! Tunverified voracity
  • He was quick to learn and was literate in both English and Irish and had a good understanding of the Brehan law.
  • Shelbourne is the first Irish league team to reach the final qualifying round since the beginning of the competition.
  • The row of cottages below and behind you, is known as Irish Row, named after some of the men who worked the mines.
  • However, his brave deed and the actions of his colleagues is now likely to be recognised both by the Garda authorities and the Irish Safety Council.
  • He was called to the Irish bar in 1951 and has earned a reputation as an esteemed playwright, poet and biographer.
  • Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, and their gifted sister Anne Bronte came from a large family of Irish origin.
  • English Roma, Irish travellers, new travellers, showmen and circus people were all consulted.
  • Irish flat racing jockeys are finding it increasingly tough to make the weight.
  • In the census of 1850, the term mulatto appears for the first time due primarily to inter-marriage between Irish and African Americans. Terrance Heath: Sotomayor and the Vulcan Standard, Pt. 2
  • It is unlikely that the Irish needed explanation of the concept of three persons in one, as triads were central to pre-Christian Celtic religious tradition.
  • Increased Irish emigration to Britain during the 1940s supplied navvies, nurses, clerks, policemen and munition workers.
  • Shortlisted vehicles will be announced in early November and the members of the Irish Motoring Writers Association will have a final chance to test-drive contending vehicles at a refresher day before final judging takes place.
  • A collection of Irish stories was fathered on him.
  • It was an impressive performance, especially when its two largest components, Allied Irish Banks and Bank of Ireland, both had a torpid year. The performance put the Irish market ahead of many of its peers.
  • D'ye know, that Irish lunatic absolutely ran the gauntlet of pandy fire to get back into Lucknow, and bring out Outram and Havelock in person (with the poor old Gravedigger hardly able to hobble along) just so that they could greet Sir Colin as he covered the last few furlongs? Fiancée
  • In time folk memory faded and with the passing of those who had lived through the events of 1903 the Gordon Bennett Race became an almost forgotten note in the annals of Irish motoring history.
  • James Joyce's view that the Irish view the British through the ‘cracked looking glass of a servant’ no longer pertains.
  • Competitors danced the Highland fling, the sword dance, the sean triubhais, the Highland reel, the sailors' hornpipe, the Irish Jig and other dances, preferably to the music of the bagpipe.
  • The opening tune "Music in the Glen" features a funky clavinet riff on the third parts that evokes Stevie Wonder more than anything Irish. The Bothy Band
  • Their music is firmly rooted in the Irish tradition but also encompasses an unusual blend of hot jazz, bluegrass and baroque.
  • Every Irishman is a person; and I believe that the most interesting persons are rarely the persons of importance. The Irish Mind
  • Today's victory is the fifth that the Irish team has chalked up this year.
  • The specter of death lingers over the entire film, both figuratively with Tommy Lee Jones as a corporate "axeman" sent to close down the show after one last performance and literally, in the form of Virginia Madsen's angel in a white trenchcoat, a noirish avatar of death who Altman credits as the "Dangerous Woman" even though she's given an actual name in the film. Archive 2008-11-01
  • Irish Toryism was the dominant political creed down to 1859, at least in terms of Westminster seats.
  • Suggestion: write it down next time and do a run through while waiting “backstage.” — airish I Do Solemnly Swear…(Line, Please?) - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • The big worry is that the cash-strapped Irish health service is ill equipped to deal with an epidemic of any form, least of all a potentially fatal virus like SARS.
  • I was born and brought up here, the eldest son of Irish parents.
  • A camper van used by the Irish holidaymaker is believed to have been one of four vehicles seized by police during a raid on the campsite.
  • It is a love story set against a backdrop of rural Irish life.
  • Climate change threatens Emerald Isle with water shortage. A new report by the Irish American Climate Project says that global warming may cause Ireland's "rich, green scenery" to "fade to brown.
  • It was also anticipated by the greatIrish socialist and feminist, William Thompson.
  • Many members of the Dail Eireann spend an excessive amount of time and effort in the constituency, but this has been more related to Irish political culture than the electoral system.
  • With few marketable skills or capital upon their arrival, Irish men secured only a tenuous foothold in the province's secondary labour market, working as labourers, harvesters, ploughmen and general farm hands.
  • Parlez-vous français, mesdemoiselles!" cried madame, and we filed out into the dusty street, at the corner of which sat another of our visible tokens of the coming of the season of flowers; a dirty, shriveled old Irishwoman, full of benedictions and beggary, who, all through the summer, sold "posies" to the passers-by. Six to Sixteen: A Story for Girls
  • Fans of David Slade, the acclaimed director of cult hits including the psycho-sexual thriller “Hard Candy” and the graphic novel noirish vampire flick “30 Days of Night,” might be shocked to discover that the man has a sweeter side. TWILIGHT SAGA NEWS FOR MARCH 4TH | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews
  • In July 2000, the wife issued proceedings in the Irish High Court claiming a decree of judicial separation and other orders.
  • The prospect of cashing in on the huge émigré market is one reason many Irish retailers are making a concerted effort to make inroads into e-commerce.
  • Irish exporters, shipping companies and road hauliers have campaigned for the height restriction to be lifted to accommodate all trucks entering the country through Dublin Port.
  • The name of Monaghan comes from the Irish language, derived from Muine Cheain meaning the Land of the Little Hills. American Chronicle
  • His accent proclaimed that he was Irish.
  • It was all a far cry from the 1897 Irish Times article which described the course as ‘a rabbit warren below the village, where a golfer requires limitless patience and an inexhaustible supply of balls’.
  • Caroline Keady, whose parents live in Withington, changed a fistful of old Irish punts into euros before flying.
  • A few months ago a friend sent me an article entitled "The Eucharist in the West" by the Irish Jesuit Michael McGuckian (New Blackfriars, March 2007), which also draws on De Lubac's work which had showed that prior to 1050 the term Body of Christ had referred to the Church and that the Eucharist had been referred to as the Mystical Body, but that that after this the Eucharist became the Body of Christ and the Church came to be referred to as the Mystical Body. Orrologion
  • Stock markets will break their three-year losing streak, but the recovery will be unspectacular, Irish business leaders said.
  • As if Ian Hamilton Finlay were not to be remembered here, he appears, in the form of a reference to his home, a little country estate which he filled with literary sculpture of his devisal, much as Simon Cutts has decorated his quaint Irish dwelling, Coracle, and outbuildings with words, turning edifice into literature. Dbqp: visualizing poetics
  • As the Irish say, we'll have a very big hooley when the millionth person gets water," Water Affairs Minister Kader Asmal told a media briefing today. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The first and last are love poems, but the second is a dirge for an Irish hero.
  • While the Irish are sheltering from icy sheets of rain and the Poles are freezing their tootsies off, the Italians are drinking wine and lounging on the southern beaches and the Spaniards are having siestas in the sun.
  • The custom of carving jack-o'-lanterns can be traced back to an old Irish folk tale.
  • This approach involves wearing unbifurcated clothing - such as Scottish or Irish kilts, Greek fustanellas, or the robes, caftans, or sarongs of other countries - as an expression of one's ethnic pride or in connection with ethnic celebrations or activities.
  • The men all had Irish accents and one was referred to Jon Jon.
  • They may not realise that the Irishman was a tortured soul during the match, and was losing sleep at the possibility of becoming the Crucible's biggest-ever choker.
  • Under EU and Irish law, it is illegal to market uncertified seed.
  • The hymn is found in a hymnary in Irish script (described by Blume in his The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • Leprechauns are the Irish version of elves or gnomes.
  • He now occupies the lofty position of Editor Emeritus at the Irish Times, an honorific title given to him for loyal, distinguished service, dedication beyond the call, etc.
  • The artist has had a seminal influence on the development of modern Irish music, since he first hit the scene in Dublin in the 1960s.
  • Baked Scottish Salmon with Seashore Vegetables, Broad Beans, Herb Garden Salad, Mayonnaise and Wild Garlic-scented Irish Soda bread.
  • The critical evaluations of a favourite work by four Irish art critics are both informative and entertaining.
  • He has an ear for the rhythm of Irish speech.
  • For one thing, it's not knit in bainin, the oiled Irish yarn that is scarcer than hen's teeth to find. The Knitting Curmudgeon
  • The city's population is predominantly Irish.
  • The Cardinal was greeted on arrival 46 years ago by a great concourse of parishioners who had gaily decorated the roads leading to the new church with bunting and scrolls, many of which were Irish.
  • His son Brian had, in accordance with an old Irish custom, passed his boyhood in "fosterage" at the court of Callaghan, King of Cashel, in East Munster. Historic Boys Their Endeavours, Their Achievements, and Their Times
  • Hamilton Oil announced that it had struck oil in the Liverpool Bay area of the Irish Sea.
  • There may be fiddle playing, singing, guitar playing, Irish dancing, poetry reading, lie-telling and leg-pulling.
  • An Irish sandwich bar in Swindon has been named the best of its kind.
  • The future direction of the Irish property market has become as unpredictable as the weather.
  • She has a faint Irish lilt.
  • When you listen to Irish or Scottish tunes, keep your pick in hand and 'strum' (I like to use the outer seam of my pants on my thigh) along with the melody. Mandolin Cafe News
  • The book says much of the author, it reads: ‘To the Irish men and women and children who lie in unhallowed grounds in the sugar cane fields of Barbados’.
  • The luck of the Irish and last year's bronze medalists was not shining.
  • In time, under his editorship, the Irish Times was capable of standing alongside any newspaper in the world.
  • Chart 1 illustrates the path of employment in industry, the key exposed sector of the Irish economy.
  • Nevertheless her ‘Nightsong’, which incorporates and subtly updates a line from an Irish song, is very fine, as is the even more stark, shell-like vocal of ‘Psalm’.
  • Aviva joins a growing band of hard-pressed life insurance companies putting the slide rule over their Irish operations in a bid to cut costs.
  • Work on the densely literary Essay on Irish Bulls sophisticated Edgeworth's approach, by requiring her to reflect on what a nation is when it is less than an autonomous state.
  • Apparently King Balor's lines are all in "Gaelic", which presumably means Irish; would be interested to know what any gaelgeori thought of this. Linkspam for 10-6-2009
  • It's unfortunate, however, that he has to rely on jaded Irish clichés of booze and blarney to enliven a story that is powerful enough to survive on its own merits.
  • Paul McErlane/European Pressphoto Agency Election posters are seen outside the headquarters in Castlebar as the Irish general election begins in County Mayo, Ireland. Ireland Heads to the Polls
  • The other possibility would be to explore such typologies in the Irish archive on other historical subjects.
  • Unfortunately the next day was gray and "muggy" -- a quality which the Queen had been told was characteristic of the Irish climate. Life of Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen — Volume 2
  • Bealtaine, apart from being the Irish word for the month of May, was a festival in pagan Ireland celebrating Spring and heralding the arrival of Summer.
  • In the old Scotch-Irish warrior tradition, Jackson regarded political opponents as mortal enemies to be crushed, if possible.
  • Irish dancing classes are held weekly in the school free of charge.
  • Apparently, Irish cows are not Irish either, but relations of the first domesticated wild oxen to be brought to this part of the world from the east by the first farmers.
  • We have a better suggestion - this cutting-edge piece of kit is the ideal replacement for the late, lamented Bryan McFadden, who recently departed legendary Irish pop combo Westlife.
  • So I thought until I was stuck in traffic for a good hour and a half on elmwood, as drunk irish frat guys screamed "HEY" to me, or someone else in the road. Drunk & Irish
  • Always an Irish favourite, Justin is equally at home playing pumping house as funky techno and always rocks the party.
  • Many Irish people went over to America during the famine.
  • Presented by a large cast of colourful characters, The Quare Fellow paints a portrait of life inside an Irish prison, in which songs, humour and compassion evoke the banter between inmates and wardens.
  • The production and studio sound is excellent, the songs in Irish attractive, the string arrangements gorgeous and the instrumental dexterity often dazzling.
  • An out-and-out nationalist, he promoted Irish industry by building exhibition buildings.
  • These were the new readers the Irish Times had to attract in order to survive, and Gageby set out on a subtle course to achieve it.
  • The indecision over the future tax break has reportedly already cost the Irish film industry millions.
  • The chance of the rope coming out of the krab on anchor placements is small unless you decide to do an Irish jig on the stance, especially when using a clove hitch that is pulled tight.
  • Some have recently been granted asylum on the basis of having an Irish child.
  • The ceremony is held annually to commemorate the lives of all Irish people who have died in past wars or while on service with the United Nations.
  • Police were questioning three people about the latest murder in one of the bloodiest feuds in Irish gangland history. Undefined
  • He also had a great attachment to the folklore and cultural traditions of the general Irishtown area.
  • Joining the Irishmen on the island is another group of clichés. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • By Wells's own testimony, she had a quick Irish wit, high spirits and radiant common sense.
  • The Irish are red-hot favourites after winning their first three matches while Wales are fighting to avoid the wooden spoon after losing to Italy, Scotland and England.
  • Be aisy, as the Irishman said, an 'if yez can't be aisy, be as aisy as ye can. Watershed
  • She was given a warm welcome by farmers at the championships and even tried her hand at ploughing with two Irish draught mares, owned by brothers Joe and Padraig Fahy, of Corrandulla, Co Galway.
  • The Irishman sitting between Scottie Brown and Kevin Thomson would positively hothouse the development of these two superb prospects, and Keane will have that effect on Celtic's youngsters.
  • I had my customary blueberry bagel and coffee, but not before Irishing it up a little.
  • Kathleen" was, as its 1892 subtitle asserted, "An Irish Drama".
  • To such had the policy of the great Irish leader brought the ignorant people who trusted him and his hirelings.
  • As they approached, the Countess, who was dressed in a complete outfit of the green uniform of the Irish Volunteers, including green boots and green cock's feathers, something like those on the Italian bersaglieri, emerged from the central doorway. Six days of the Irish Republic A Narrative and Critical Account of the Latest Phase of Irish Politics
  • He never learnt Irish and his philological arguments tended to invoke specious homophones and improbable etymologies.
  • Perhaps they had not heard my last name: My family is pale, and my fair, freckly skin looks more Irish than Mexican. Robert Gonzalez: Republicans and the Hispanic Rift
  • The €3m fund in the fourth investment plan will be used for direct investment in pre-established and bare land afforestation supported by EU and Irish government grants.
  • Botha also scored the first try, after just three minutes, as the Boks made their intentions clear from the kick-off as they drove strongly into the Irish territory.
  • What's your view on the relatively low participation of women at executive level in Irish corporates?
  • With few marketable skills or capital upon their arrival, Irish men secured only a tenuous foothold in the province's secondary labour market, working as labourers, harvesters, ploughmen and general farm hands.
  • Patrick never, like the Pied Piper, charmed actual snakes into mass suicide so the Irish people wouldn't ever have to worry about them again -- but he did "rid" the island of the snake-tattooed Druids, in a way. Chris Weigant: Saint Patrick and the Snakes
  • The upshot is that the parents of Irish babies are averaging a mere 5.5 hours of unbroken sleep.
  • Boring mealtimes are set to be spiced up, as Irish designers produce statement pieces for the table that bring individuality to place settings.
  • He vacillated when he was asked the direct question at an Irish press conference about the Sunderland job and immediately established in some people's minds the belief that he was actively looking for another job.
  • Day after day there was an old Irish labourer, a stonebreaker, by the wayside, kneeling on a sack beside a great heap of stones, who gave her a cheery good-morrow as she passed. The Beth Book Being a Study of the Life of Elizabeth Caldwell Maclure, a Woman of Genius
  • The ice cream does contain Irish free-range egg yolks.
  • Nevertheless, An Irish Working Class does offer some rewards to the efforts of non-specialist readers.
  • The Irish possessed a strength of numbers, influence, and confidence beyond their fellow Irish in North America and elsewhere.
  • A typically Irish face was made wise and calm and undecipherable by much experience.
  • Of course, the most important constituency to which the league appealed was the Irish-speaking population concentrated on the western and southern seaboards of the island.
  • How disappointed all of you human baktags will be when you find out He is just an Irish/German honky from the Midwest USA. R-RATED WALK HARD TRAILER
  • The following advertisement also appeared in the same edition: The gaily painted caravan of the Irish tinkers is still a common sight on the country roads, the waste lots and outskirts of our cities and towns.
  • That's typical of Irish folks' ability to turn a plain sentence or phrase into poetry, song or satire.
  • The Dingle Peninsula has been highlighted as an international stronghold for an endangered Irish bird, the distinctive red-billed chough.
  • I'm sure he exaggerates his Irish accent .
  • Caroline toughed it out at first, not wanting to miss practice with her Irish stepdancing team, the Aoibhneas an Rince Dancers. Doctors at Children's Hospital remove a cyst, and pain, from a young dancer
  • But she does have lots of feisty Irish spirit and a best friend called Marion, who enjoys a few drinks and a good old sing song in the local pub.
  • There's Irish blood on his mother's side.
  • There were wild celebrations among the Irish players and their noisy army of fans.
  • It is, doubtless, in humble imitation of such illustrious examples, that an Irishman of the lowest class, when he means to express that he is a member of a committee, says, _I am a committee_; thus consolidating the power, wisdom, and virtue of a whole committee in his own person. Tales and Novels — Volume 04
  • Good breeding is a vital element in Flat racing and Eddery himself has horsemanship in his genes, being the son of Irish champion jockey Jimmy.
  • It was a true colony, a completely imported world: craftsmen, artisans, peasant settlers, ironware - all brought across the Irish Sea.
  • In addition, female figures were prominent in the Irish Catholic hagiolatry of the area, harking back to the powerful position of goddesses and female druids in the pagan Celtic belief system, a status that carried over into early Celtic Christianity. Gutenber-e Help Page
  • It was 1995 and many Irish retailers were moving upmarket.
  • Other cartoons express a fear of collusion between British authorities, the rebellious Irish, and the Catholic Church.
  • A municipal borough of northwest Wales on a narrow strait of the Irish Sea opposite Anglesey Island.
  • It was a classic piece of opportunism by Ryanair, the cut-price Irish airline, which has cultivated a reputation for irreverence and has a history of picking fights with the big guys. What Do We Do About Ireland?
  • The Irish ranchers twitted me good-naturedly on my exploit, and patted me on the back until I felt that I had done something heroic. Chapter 4
  • When the Irish portraitist, Nathaniel Hone painted her in 1765, she was at the height of her popularity.
  • Some of my Irish friends had not yet settled, and I asked one of them if he would be good enough to take my money and get me a ticket when he was getting one for himself, and he quickly replied "yes sir, I will get you a tacket. Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, an American Slave, Written by Himself
  • An emergency meeting of the Irish regional executive is expected to be mandated by the six Irish districts during the week.
  • The decision of Government to send reinforcements to Ireland was mentioned as a prelude to the information from Vienna of the birth of a son to the Princess Nikolas: and then; having conjoined the two entirely heterogeneous pieces of intelligence, the composer adroitly interfused them by a careless transposition of the prelude and the burden that enabled him to play ad libitum on regrets and rejoicings; by which device the lord of Earlsfont might be offered condolences while the lady could express her strong contentment, inasmuch as he deplored the state of affairs in the sister island, and she was glad of a crisis concluding a term of suspense thus the foreign-born baby was denounced and welcomed, the circumstances lamented and the mother congratulated, in a breath, all under cover of the happiest misunderstanding, as effective as the cabalism of Prospero's wand among the Neapolitan mariners, by the skilful Irish development on a grand scale of the rhetorical figure anastrophe, or a turning about and about. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • Cruttenden cites evidence that the Irish population there was almost inexistant before 1830 and that the Scots there were mainly from the Eastern lowland regions where the pattern is not observed, whereas there is documentary evidence that the Language Log
  • The seas around West Kerry have been throwing up some very unusual species of fish in recent days and the latest haul included three white albinos which were hooked by Irish fishermen.
  • Once the home of John Grey, one of the great names in Irish yachting, this Victorian mid-terrace property is now owned by the artist Desmond McCarthy.
  • Mee talks about the alleged good work of members of the zoo-trade body, the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquaria (Biaza).
  • The Government was forced to recall the Dail earlier than expected because of the Anglo Irish crisis and the Labour Party wants the Oireachtas to sit for the rest of the week. Independent.ie - Frontpage RSS Feed
  • This is based on references in Irish hagiography to belts having been preserved as relics of the saints who wore them.
  • Irish rock star Bono and US Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill were due to start a three-day visit to Uganda on Sunday, the third leg of an unusual tour focussing on HIV/AIDS and the efficacity of aid relief in Uganda. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • He was an officer in the Irish Guards before becoming a novice monk in the Benedictine Order in 1955.
  • For ten months I was a volunteer intern at the Irish Film Archive, an affiliate of the Film Institute of Ireland.
  • But O'Duffy's admiration for the sheer effrontery of the man persisted, and he arranged for another trial to be held in conjunction with the Irish championships.
  • Indeed, one civil engineer writing to the Irish Times this week expressed astonishment at the figure.
  • The pheasant is a beautiful bird and though not native still has adapted very well to living in the Irish countryside.
  • She smiled at Lady Eileen, but not patronizingly, because a mysterious instinct told her that the plain, pleasant young girl in Irish tweed was a "swell. Winnie Childs The Shop Girl
  • He referred to a number of scenarios which would not be permissible under Irish law at present.
  • The rising euro and the refusal of the EU commissariat to reflate the EU economy implies that the exporting side of the Irish economy will be squeezed.
  • They possessed significantly more knowledge of Irish politics and history than those claiming no Irish descent.
  • This may indicate that the Picts routinely used Irish names for girls, which would be consistent with the colourful origin legend of the first Picts having obtained wives from Ireland see article on Pictish matriliny for the legend. Archive 2010-01-01
  • McCarthy's angular face, a weather-beaten mask of crags and furrows, hides an inner core filled with Yorkshire steel and Irish charm.
  • Maud Gonne was the muse of W.B. Yeats, the Irish poet.
  • After taking his exams at Marlborough, he went to work for an Irish horse-dealer, then, at 17, joined the Middleton Hunt in North Yorkshire as a whipper-in.
  • The first objective, newsy article on blogging I've seen in a mainstream paper comes from The Irish Times.
  • Like many modern Irish writers, Beckett resented the pettiness, prejudice and prudery of his country of birth.
  • The Irish Hospitality Industry Alliance, an umbrella group made up of publicans opposed to the ban, says many family-run pubs in the south won't be in business this time next year.
  • E4 is also offering regional advertising opportunities for Irish companies.
  • Wire strings not only were used on guitars, mandoras, and bass lutes, but gave rise to a whole new family of string instruments, which included zithers, citterns, the Irish harp, psaltery, clavichord and others during the 15th and 16th centuries.
  • Favourite backers got off to a flying start when Irish banker Like-A-Butterfly won the Cheltenham Festival opener.
  • I mean, I get mind-dementing hangovers when I party where Irish whiskey is being poured by the tumblerful and this morning was no exception. Mexican Immigrants in New York City
  • This cornucopia of all things interesting and Irish continues with a large offering of Irish silverware.
  • In assembly elections last November, the erstwhile mainstream parties were beaten by the hard-liners -- Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army, and the DUP, led by the loyalist, anti - "popery" firebrand Ian Paisley. MARCHING TOWARD CIVILITY
  • The increase in stamp duty to 9 per cent on non-residential property will weigh against investing in the Irish commercial property market.
  • Ballingarry, third in the Irish Derby and St Leger, strode past the post to take 12 points in the World standings.
  • The discourses of gender, religion, and post-colonialism inform his use of the literatures, both Irish language and Anglo-Irish, from that period.
  • All sorts of music will be well represented at the festival, including concerts of Irish folk music, jazz, Parisian chansons and brass bands.
  • The book follows the plight of an orphaned Irish girl who marries into New York society.
  • Its functions relate principally to the monitoring of radioactivity in the environment and of radiation doses received by Irish people in the course of their work.
  • This is an old favourite on Irish menus, and was well delivered, especially with the interesting anise note from the tarragon.
  • The Irish Texts Society, founded in 1900, began to publish editions of classic Irish texts with full scholarly apparatus.
  • His precise Irish pedigree is not clear, but his self-made man credentials are impeccable.
  • This was more in the character of the Irish itinerant gambler, called in that country a ` ` carrow, '' than of the Scottish beggar. The Antiquary
  • The Irish educate proportionately more young people to university level than the British.
  • The wall-of-water theory is that in a lashing force - nine storm in the Irish Sea, a huge wave built up, swamped the vessel and pushed it below the surface.

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