That would depend on how you were travelling and where in Ireland you were arriving. There are many ways of travelling to Ireland from Paris, including combinations of rail, road, sea and air. Flying, you could travel to Dublin in 90 minutes. Leaving at 7am and allowing for the fact that Ireland is one hour behind Paris as they are in different time zones, you would be arriving in Ireland at 7:30am local time. By boat, it is about a 24 hour journey, plus the travel time to one of the ports from Paris, so it would depend on which port you were travelling to, as to how long it would take. You could also go by train from Paris to London, via the channel tunnel and once in London there are various ways to continue your journey to Ireland.
According to Air France, the flight time is between 11 and 12 hours. Usually, you arrive in Los Angeles about three hours (clock time) after leaving Paris, France.
Wednesday.
It is possible to leave somewhere at a particular time and arrive earlier than you left. An example would be leaving one time zone in the USA and crossing over into a new time zone. If you left a town on the border of the Texas panhandle and crossed over into New Mexico, you would arrive an almost an hour before you left.
Wednesday.
Ireland was in the Commonwealth until 1949. Some people would have supported the membership of it, but others would not. On becoming a republic in 1949, it left.
If you left Korea early Wednesday morning and flew to Hawaii, you would arrive on Tuesday. This is because Hawaii is behind Korea in time zones, so when you account for the time difference and the flight duration, you effectively "gain" a day. Thus, you would arrive the day before, on Tuesday.
Look Left - Ireland - was created in 2009.
Ireland left the Commonwealth in 1949. As it is not a member of the Commonwealth, there is no reason why it would participate in the Commonwealth Games.
This depends on what method of transport you are using to get there.
If you can make the flight from Norway to the US in less than 6 hours, you would arrive before you left as Norwegian time is 6 hours ahead of US time...
i think it would be 3 pm?, i dont know though.
In England, as in the rest of the UK and Ireland, we drive on the left-hand side of the road. This is because the majority of our population has always been right-handed. Many years ago, when we still used horse-and-cart, it was decreed that we would drive on the left so that if we were attacked, we could hold the reigns with our left hand, and defend ourselves with the right (our strong hand).