If you mean Co. Clare it would be 'Contae an Chláir'.
The female name Clare is usually written Claire or Clár in Irish, although some just use Clare even when the last name is in Irish.
In Scotland the Gaelic name Sorcha (clear, bright) is 'englished' as Claire. It is pronounced like 'soraha' and is used in Ireland also but equated with Sarah.
In Scottish Gaelic it is Blàr, which imeans 'field, battle, battlefield'. The surname may also be spelled Blàrach.
Clár
For what it's worth, it's Carál in Irish Gaelic.
Clare is not a Gaelic word.
It is an Irish surname derived from the Irish Gaelic Ó hIcí (descendant of the healer or physician). Numerous in Tipperary-Clare-Limerick.
Scottish Gaelic and Irish Gaelic are both part of the Goidelic branch of the Celtic languages. They share a common ancestry, originating from Middle Irish. However, they developed independently from each other over time, leading to differences in pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar.
In Irish d'fhíorghrá;in Scottish Gaelic: ?
No Irish Gaelic form
Gaelic football is an Irish football. Gaelic means Irish. Obviously then the Gaelic our Irish people
The Irish Gaelic for 'turbine' is TUIRBÍN; the Scottish Gaelic is TUIRBIN.
In Irish Gaelic the word for chilli is CILLÍ.
In Irish Gaelic it is diabéiteas.
In Irish Gaelic: saoirse
'Thin' is tanaí in Irish Gaelic.