'gáire' is pronounced gaw-(i)r-e and means 'laugh'
'gaire' (without the accent on the 'a') is prounced as guir-e and means' nearer'.
Moyle or 'mile' in Old Irish.
Bairbre, barr-i-breh
"X is ainm dom" [--- iss annim dhum] in Irish Gaelic;
Niall is the Irish Gaelic form
It is apparently not Irish. It looks alike a misspelling of 'eolas' as in the Scottish Gaelic 'Eulan an Torranain' which should be spelled 'Eolas an Torranain'.
The word for "name" is ainm in Irish (Gaelic);In (Scots) Gaelic it's also ainm.('Surname' is sloinne in Irish; sloinneadh in Scottish Gaelic.)
It is an English name and most likely has no Irish Gaelic form.
Dáibhí (pronounced dhaw-vee) is David but the Old Irish name Dáithí (dhaw-hee) is also considered an equivalent. You can hear Irish words pronounced at abair.ie.
No Irish equivalent.
'Melanie' is used in Ireland even with the surname in Gaelic. There is no Irish Gaelic version of the name.
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.)
You don't. It is not a Gaelic name.