Potentially, yes. If the child has parents or grandparents who are Irish, then they can. There are lots of other ways that someone can be entitled to Irish citizenship. See the website below.
You should be able to. Click on the link below for the Irish department of foreign affairs.
In Irish mythology, Ireland's child of light was Cu Chulainn.
Yes. See here for details on how to take up citizenship. http://www.dfa.ie/home/index.aspx?id=267
Yes
Jus Sanguinis (law of blood) Jus Sanguinis (law of blood)
If you mean Irish "Gaelic" (called simply Irish in Ireland), it can be dailtín (of child), smuilcín(scamp, brat, impudent) or somachán (brat, plump child). In (Scottish) Gaelic: ?
No. If your baby is born outside of Canada you need to apply for them to have Canadian citizenship. A child's citizenship is automatically determined based on where they are born.
The people in Ireland would be against the idea of child soldiers in other countries. It would not happen in Ireland itself. Lots of Irish people do charity work in countries where it does happen in order to prevent it happening by helping the people there. So there would be a lot of support for children by Irish people giving to those charities and working with them.
An Irish superstition is that a child born at night will have the gift of seeing fairies and ghosts. Irish culture has strong folklore traditions, and this includes certain beliefs about the supernatural world.
When the minor illegal alien is adopted, the minor child gains the citizenship of his adopted parents, so when he/she is adopted they become a US citizen if their parents are US citizens.
Absolutely. The child can become a US citizen through its parents who are US citizens. The child has to apply for citizenship by filing in Form N-600 to obtain the certificate of citizenship. The child should be under 18 years of age in order to document their citizenship status. Even if the child was born outside the US, it will become a US citizen though its US citizen parents.
Northern Irish citizens are entitled to British nationality, Irish nationality, or both (dual British-Irish nationality).Children born in Northern Ireland are British Citizens by default at the time of their birth, per United Kingdom nationality law. However, the child can almost immediately be registered as an Irish Citizen instead of (or as well as) a British Citizen, usually if born into an Irish family.