The Irish word for deer is "fiadh."
The habitat of an Irish Deer is Russa
They are similar. The Irish deer still lives wild in Ireland while the Irish Elk was a much larger form of deer and is long extinct! None as The Great Irish Elk.
Irish Deer always eats leaves and little animals, like squirrel's, and raccoons
GRASS
In the Irish language, "deer" is fia; in the (Scottish) Gaelic it is fiadh.
Wolfs eated them
yes they did,in fact 12 of them
1909
No. The Irish Elk (which is extinct, by the way), were herbivores, just like today's deer and deer-related species are. The Irish Elk were prey animals, hunted down by lions, wolves and sometimes bears.
A Stor. pr. ashtore. It means "dear". Just in case the Gaelic word for "deer" is Fia (singular0 and Fionn (pl).
The Irish name for a great black deer, probably the Mcgaceros Hiber nicus, or Irish elk, now extinct. Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894
the Japanese word for deer is...Shika......Deer=shika