Chara is pronounced as "KAH-rah."
"Welcome home"
I've never heard it that way; perhaps "Fáilte romhat, a chara" is better.You can't just string Irish words together if you don't know how Irish works."Welcome, friend" is the translation.Céad míle fáilte widely known and used phrase as an alternative for "failte mhór", meaning a hundred thousand welcomes
"Fáilte isteach " means "Welcome in"
Cara means friend; a chara can mean 'his friend' or when addressing someone A chara, O friend. This is Irish Gaelic.
If it is on a horseshoe or something related to Ireland, it is probably actually saying Failte. Failte means "welcome." The "t" in uncial/Celtic script can often look like a "z."
There are many ways one can find Failte, Ireland. One can find Failte, Ireland by visiting popular on the web GPS systems such as the very popular Yahoo! Maps.
Actually "mo chara" simply means "my friend", "mo" means "my" and "chara" means "friend"It's 'my friend' in Irish Gaelic.
"na fáilte" means "of the welcome" "shere" isn't an Irish word.
Probably 'Céad míle fáilte', Irish for 'one hundred thousand welcomes'.
"CÉAD MÍLE FÁILTE" means "100,000 Welcomes".
"Chara" is a female name often considered to be a variation of the name "Charlotte" and means "happiness" or "joy" in Greek.