In Irish it's: Beannacht Dé ort (singular) / Beannacht Dé oraibh (plural)
'Beannacht Dé ort!' God bless you. (To one person)
'Beannacht Dé oraibh!' is the plural.
(These are all forms used when speaking to oneperson.)
Tá grá ag Dia duit.
(sounds like tah grah igg jeeh-ah ditch)
PS Try and get a native speaker to say it for you or you'll end up sounding like
Pope John Paul II (of happy memory)!
Dia dhuit.
Pronounced: Deea gwit.
Dia leat (singular) / Dia libh (plural)
Moladh go deo le Dia. (Blessed be God forever.)
go raibh Dia leat agus go mbeannaí Dia duit
Dia sa teach / Go mbeannaí Dia do bhaile
Go mbeannaí Dia sinn.
beannacht
In Irish it's bheannaigh.
The word for 'blessed' is 'beannaithe' in the Irish language.
Barúch is a phonetic Irish spelling of the Hebrew name "Baruch". In Irish it has no meaning, in Hebrew it means blessed.
In the Irish language, beannaithe. In Scottish Gaelic, ? In Manx Gaelic, ? In Welsh, gwyn In Breton, ? In Cornish, ?
Is beannaithe thú (singular; Is beannaithe sibh (plural)
Saol beannaithe in Irish;in Scottish Gaelic beatha bheannaichteManx: bea vannee
In Irish, St Patrick is Naomh Pádraig (Blessed Patrick) but non-Irish saints are 'San' as in 'San Héilin' (St Helena).
Aine is the Irish word for Anne. Saint Anne was the mother of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Bennett is an English and Irish language surname derived from the medieval given name Benedict (Latin, Benedictus, "blessed")
Saint Patrick in Irish is Naomh Pádraig (naomh means holy or blessed).
Blessed Edmund Rice was the founder of the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Congregation of Brothers of the Presentation (Irish Christian Brothers) in Waterford, Ireland in 1802.