In Irish Rachel is the same as in English.
(The Scottish Gaelic Raonaid is equated with Rachel, however.)
Raonaid [rooneetch].
It's Rachel.
Niall is the Irish Gaelic form
It is an English name and most likely has no Irish Gaelic form.
Woulfe's "Irish Names for Children" gives Séarlait as an Irish Gaelic form of the borrowed French name.
The Irish Gaelic form of the name Brendan is Breandán. It is derived from the Welsh word for "prince".
This sort of name is left in the original form even if the last name is in an Irish Gaelic or Scottish Gaelic form.
The Irish form of the name is Nóra.
The closest Gaelic name is Aidan, spelled Aodhán in Irish Gaelicand Aodhan in Scottish Gaelic.
The Scottish Gaelic form of the surname is MacIllFhionndaig.As a first name it would be Liondsaidh.(Some Irish families that adopted the name 'Lindsay' were MacClintock, Lynchy, and O'Lynn.)
Yes, Rachael can be an Irish name. It is a variation of the name Rachel, which has Gaelic origins and is commonly used in Ireland.
Iósua is the Irish form of the Old Testament name.
There is no special Gaelic form of the name; it would be the same.
The Gaelic form of Alana is Alannah.COMMENT:No it is not; Alannah is an anglicized version of "a leanbh" (o child, in the vocative case) or alternately a feminine form of Alan. It is not a Gaelic form.