"Bally" is frequently used in Irish placenames. In Irish it is "baile" which can mean "home" or "place".
Bally is an extremely common prefix to town names in Ireland, and is derived from the Gaelic phrase 'Baile na', meaning 'place of'
Many Irish places begin with the letters Bally. It comes from the Irish word Baile, meaning town or place. So very many places in Ireland begin with Bally.
In Irish Gaelic it means 'a town, village'. It can also mean 'home' in some cases.Bally comes from the Irish word "Baile" meaning town or place. That is why it features in so many Irish placenames. Any time you see Bally at the beginning of a placename it is basically saying that it is "the place of..." and whatever place it is.
'Will' is not an Irish word and has no meaning in Irish.
'Colt' is not an Irish word. The Irish word for colt is bromach.
Not an Irish word.
'Brandie' is not a word in the Irish language.
'Late' is a word in English not Irish.
It's not a word in Irish Gaelic.
Kayla does not have a direct translation in Irish, as it is not a traditional Irish name. It would typically be used as it is, without adaptation or translation.
Ryann is not an Irish word and has no meaning in Irish.
"Tommy" is not an Irish word.