It depends on which Gaelic you intend:
Irish Gaelic is Céad míle fáilte
but Scottish Gaelic is Ceud mìle fàilte.
A hundred thousand welcomes, or céad míle fáilte, is a very common Irish Gaelic phrase. It is typically pronounced kayd mee-luh fall-chuh.
céad míle fáilte (kade meela fallcha)
CÉAD MÍLE FÁILTE in Irish.
The phrase appears in both Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic.In both, it means "A Hundred Thousand Welcomes".In Irish Gaelic, it's spelled Céad Míle Fáilte. In Gaelic (Scottish), Ceud Mìle Fàilte.That's fine for a sign in a pub or shop. But to be grammatically correct, if you're saying it to a person, it should be "A hundred thousand welcomes to you" :Céad míle fáilte romhat (Irish Gaelic) or Ceud mìle fàilte dhut (Scots Gaelic).It's pronounced kayd meela foll-tja rót in Irish Gaelic,and kee-ud meel-a faahl-tja ghooht in Scots Gaelic.
Probably 'Céad míle fáilte', Irish for 'one hundred thousand welcomes'.
A hundred thousand welcomes to you! (to one person).
It's céad míle fáilte and it's Irish. It means welcome. The literal meaning is one hundred (céad) thousand (míle) welcomes (fáilte).
One hundred thirty thousand, six hundred.
There is only one hundred thousand in a hundred thousand.
a hundred thousand and one. The next power of 10 higher is one million.
i dont know.... ask your mom Cem mil boas-vindas.... Você é bem-vindo cem mil vezes.
One hundred thousand, two hundred and three.
Twelve hundred, or one thousand, two hundred.
one hundred : 100fifteen thousand : 15 000fifteen thousand one hundred : 15 100
One hundred thousand is not a million.