Ireland
Theres ireland, scotland, whales and many more Theres ireland, scotland, whales and many more Theres ireland, scotland, whales and many more
No... Gaelic is not even spoken across the whole of the UK (the UK being more than one country). Gaelic is pokemm in Ireland and Scotland.
Great Britain (more specifically, Northern Ireland).
Gaelic is the ancient language of Scotland and Ireland. In Scotland, it is still spoken by the inhabitants of the Western Isles, a group of islands off the west coast of Scotland but not many other people in Scotland are able to speak the language. It is more widely used in Ireland, particularly in the west and south of the country, where it is known as Irish or Erse. It is a mandatory subject in Irish schools.
Scotland
In the west and southwest of Ireland: l-your (rhymes with 'flour') in the northwest of Ireland and Scotland: l-yore (rhymes with 'more')
It is simply because more people have moved to Ireland and more people are being born in Ireland.
Scotland is to the North and Ireland is to the West.Although Scotland is not actually a country, and neither is England. Both are part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - or more commonly, the UK
England Ireland Scotland wales France Portugal Spain GGermany and more x
Kyle in Gaelic means "woods", The name is more common in Scotland, where is is also a place name and a surname, in Scotland it means narrow
No. There are more people in the USA that claim Irish ancestry than the population of Ireland, but there are more actual Irish people in Ireland than there are actual Irish people in the USA.