There would be no major differences.
Fairly different. A lot of words can be identified as the language is being simplified over the years, but the foundation is different. English is a germanic language, whereas irish is a celtic language
England has no Irish mountains near its borders. Ireland is a different island.
There are no automatic translators that can accurately translate from English to Irish or Irish to English.
Béarla - English language If you mean "is Irish the same as English", the answer is no. Irish Gaelic is a distinct language. Hiberno-English is a form of English.
Irish Pride in English is:
Odell is English. O'Dell is Irish. The Irish name was adopted from the English in the 17th century.
The native Irish name Dónall is equated with the English name Daniel, although they are of different origins.
harrill is English harrill in Irish is the same it was originally English
Edward O'Reilly has written: 'An Irish-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Irish language, English 'An Irish-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Dictionaries, English, English language, Grammar, Irish, Irish language 'Sanas Gaoidhilge-Sagsbhearla' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Grammar, Irish, Irish language
Yes. If you have the relevant criteria that entitle you to a passport for different countries then you can have more than one passport. Many people have both Irish and British passports. There is no such thing as an 'English' passport.
In an english/Irish dictionary!. Available at read ireland.com
Maori, French, English and Irish.